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THE 



LOST CONTINENT; 



OR, 



•lawtrg and Ifte ^Ia%tpde 



IN AFRICA, 



1875. 

With observations on the Asiatic Slave-trade, carried on under the 
name of the labour tra Mc^ andj ome other subjects. 




JOSEPH COOPER. 



LONDON: 
LONGMANS, GREEN & Co. 



1875. 



1^ 






LONDON : 

BARRETT, SONS AND CO., PRINTERS, 

SEETHING LANE, E.G. 



CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER 1. 

PAGE 

The State of Africa — Inefficiency of the present attempts to 
destroy the Slave-trade — ^The only Remedy — Slavery in 
Turkey, Egypt, Persia — ^Wars of Aggression — Sir Samuel 
Baker — Colonel Gordon, &c - - - - i 

CHAPTER II. 

Slave-trade in Afghanistan — The Ameer subsidised by England 
— Supplied with Arms used in carrying on the Slave-trade 
— Slavery on the Gold Coast — Slavery and the Slave-trade 



19 

CHAPTER III. 

Slavery and the Slave-trade in the Portuguese Settlements on the 

East Coast of Africa and the African Island of St. Thomas - 25 

CHAPTER IV. 
Slavery in Brazil — Rapid Decrease in the number of Slaves — 
Extraordinary Death-Rate — Insufficiency of the Abolition 
Law of 1 87 1 — Urgent Necessity of Freedom - - 3^ 



J 



IV CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER V. 

PAGE 

The Asiatic Slave-trade — The French Colonies — British West 

Indies and Mauritius — Chinese in Peru - - - 35 



CHAPTER VI. 
The Fiji Islands — The Contract System - . 51 

CHAPTER VII. 

Slavery in Cuba — The Slave-Trade Treaties — Destruction of 
Life — Wotking of Slavery on the Estates — Captain Towns- 
hend's Visit — Fashionable Prejudice — Conduct of the Blacks : 
testimony of Governors of Jamaica — Leeward Islands - 60 

CHAPTER VIII. 

Civil War in Cuba — The Spanish Government of the Island — 
The two great parties — The Revolution in Spain, 1868 — 
Special Laws — ^Abolition of Slavery in Porto Rico— Course 
of the late British Cabinet - - - -70 

CHAPTER IX. 

The Zanzibar Treaty—Legal difficulties as to its provisions — 
New Routes by Land for the Slave-trade — Condition of the 
African People where not demoralised by the Slave-trader - 79 

CHAPTER X. 

Dr. Livingstone's last Journals — Christian regard for Human Life 

^Slave-trade as seen in his latter years - - - 85 



CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER XI. 

PAGE 

Christian Missions — Dr. Livingstone — Colonel Cameron — New 
and extensive steam communication with Zanzibar, ports 
in Eastern Africa — Projected Ship Canal, North Western 
Africa ------- 89 

CHAPTER Xn. 
Introduction of British Indian Coolies into Surinam — The Dutch 

in Java — Dutch war of aggression in Acheen - - 94 

CHAPTER XIIL 

Queensland — ^The Labour Traffic — Condition of the Islanders on 

the Estates - - - - - - 102 

CHAPTER XIV. 

Coolies imported into the British West Indies during a period of 
Twenty-nine years — The number returned to their own 
country — Their savings — Number now in the Colonies — 
The death-rate - - - - - - no 

CHAPTER XV. 
Concluding Remarks - - - - - -114 



, 1 



, "7 




^ 

•^ 



^ 

^ 



~-? 



PREFACE. 



Since the publication of " Slavery and the Slave-trade 
in Africa in 1872," many circumstances have occurred to 
excite public interest in the question. 

The discovery of Dr. Livingstone at Ujiji, his subsequent 
travels and lamented death, together with the mission of 
Sir Bartle Frere and the works of other travellers, have 
all combined to arouse an intense amount of popular 
feeling. 

Will this public interest be brought to bear in the right 
direction ? 

If so, under the Divine blessing. Slavery and the Slave- 
trade in Africa may speedily be abolished. 

To show that there is no insurmountable obstacle to 
this at the present time, the following pages have been 
written. 

From what is passing in the great Valley of the Nile, 
it is clear that one of two things will shortly take place. 



I 

A 



Vlll PREFACE. 

Either Slavery will be abolished, in the Mohammedan 
countries, and with it the Slave-trade in Africa, or the 
world must witness a new slave-market of enormous extent. 

It is for the people of England and the other great nations, 
under the blessing and power of an overruling Providence, to 
do much at the present time to decide this great question. 

When the people are really in earnest, the Governments 
act ; without a healthy public opinion behind them, states- 
men neither act nor have the power to do so. 



Essex Hall, Walthamstow, 
Fourth Months 1875. 



THE LOST CONTINENT. 



CHAPTER I. 



The State of Africa — Inefficiency of the present attempts to destroy the 
Slave-trade — ^Thc only Remedy — Slavery in Turkey, Egypt, Persia 
— Wars of Aggression — Sir Samuel Baker — Colonel Gordon, &c. 

When the events of the present age pass into History, 
probably no greater anomaly will be observed than the state 
of the vast Continent of Africa during this part of the present 
century. The slave-trade at the present time extends over 
the greater part of the Northern, Southern, and Central 
regions, and covers an area nearly equal to that of the whole 
of Europe. 

That something like a fourth part of the World, capable 
of producing an abundant supply of almost all those things 
which are necessary to the comfort and happiness of mankind, 
should have remained an unproductive wilderness, will be an 
enigma not easy of solution to the future historian. 

He will not fail to observe that by the exertions and self- 
sacrifice of enterprising travellers a flood of light had from 



THE LOST CONTINENT. 



time to time been shed over many of the dark places of 
Africa, and that well-intended, long-sustained, and noble 
efforts had in consequence been made to bring about a 
better state of things. 

Should he however be able to take a full and compre- 
hensive view of the whole question, he will doubtless see that 
these efforts have been misdirected, ana that in consequence 
they have been followed only by partial and almost insigni- 
ficant results; and further, that by some unaccountable 
fatuity the true remedy had been almost entirely neglected. 

In no age have the great questions connected with supply 
and demand in commercial affairs been so thoroughly dis- 
cussed as during the second quarter of the present cen- 
tury, and in none has it been made so apparent that the 
demand generally creates the supply. By what fatuity is it 
then, that in attempting to deal with the slave-trade, 
attention should have been wholly devoted to the question 
of supply, and no attention should have been given to 
demand ? 

It cannot be said that the question is one of humanity 
merely ; for, as man is converted intc^ property by the slave- 
trade, the question is one of commerce, and therefore sub- 
ject to the laws which govern supply and demand. 

To supply the demand for slaves in the Mohammedan 
countries has long been the most lucrative trade carried on 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 



in Africa, and the attempt to destroy this traffic by dealing 
with the supply alone has heretofore proved not more 
effective than would have been an attempt to prevent water 
from finding its level. 

Hence, notwithstanding all that has been done, the African 
slave-trade as a whole, is, at this moment, probably as great 
as it has been at any previous time. 

Whilst slaves fetch £30 to ^^50 each in Turkey and 
Egypt, it must be impossible to stop the trade, unless the 
absurd idea be entertained that the vast coasts of Africa can 
be sealed. Nearly all the bloody wars which depopulate 
and desolate Africa have their origin not in Africa, but in the 
countries to which the slaves are driven. 

There are doubtless intertribal wars in Africa, but f©>^ven 
of these may not be traced immediately or remotely to a 
demand which it is above all things profitable to supply. 
Wars in Africa having no connection with the slave-trade, 
are, in fact, comparatively so few that they do not form an 
important element in the question. 

The slave-trade has now existed more than three centuries, 
and within that period, according to a careful French writer, 
more than fifty millions of slaves have been taken from 
Africa. 

The responsibility for the crimes and horrors which these 
figures represent must rest in the first instance upon the 

B 3 

A 



THE LOST CONTINENT. 



Christian nations of Europe who introduced the system into 
Africa in the sixteenth century. 

Under some sense of this responsibility, as it would seem, 
and with an earnest desire to bring the system to an end, the 
representatives of the eight principal European Powers, who 
met in Vienna in 1815 and again in Verona in 1822, declared 
that the state of Africa was a degradation to Europe, and 
pledged their respective Governments never to cease their 
efforts to bring the slave-trade to complete and definite 
abolition.* 

Since that time great changes have taken place — the 
Atlantic slave-trade has ceased, or very nearly so. But the 
traffic mostly now carried on by the overland routes east- 
ward has enormously increased. The principal countries 
on behalf of which the present African slave-trade is carried 
on are Turkey, Egypt, Persia, Tunis, Morocco, and Mada- 
gascar. On them the responsibility for the present state of 
Africa now mainly rests. 

The rulers of these countries have, in nearly every instance, 
at one time or other, condemned both slavery and the slave- 
trade, and have entered into treaty engagements for the sup- 
pression of the Slave Markets throughout their dominions. 
How is it, then, that the slave-trade is still carried on in 



* See Appendix A. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE, 



those countries in violation both of law and treaty engage- 
ments? One answer to this will probably be found in the 
fact that the European Powers, though solemnly pledged to 
bring the system to a definitive end, have taken little interest 
in the subject for the last thirty years, during which period 
the traffic has pretty steadily increased. 

Now that the whole subject is better understood, it becomes 
every day more manifest that slavery must cease to exist in 
Turkey and Egypt, the two nations in which is to be found 
the greatest drain upon Africa, What is required is, that 
the laws shall no longer recognize human beings as property, 
and that the buying and selling them shall be made felony. 
It is this recognition by the law, of property in man, which 
lies at the root of the whole mischief. 

Some people who have paid little attention to the subject 
imagine that the abolition of slavery involves the removal 
from their employments of all the servile population. This 
is a great mistake — employers and employed will each 
stand in need of the other, and in many cases remain in 
their present connection after the abolition of slavery has 
taken place. If the slaves are as happy as some people 
represent, they will of course not leave their employers, — 
if otherwise, the master will have a new motive for 
improving their condition in the desire to retain them. 
Inconveniences will doubtless attend the transition, but 



THE LOST CONTINENT. 



these evils will be small compared with those which, sooner 
or later, overtake all countries in which slavery is allowed 
to exist. The abolition of slavery must eventually prove 
as great a boon to the employer as to the employed, 
because slavery is the principal cause of that lethargy and 
sensuality which are so injurious to the people, and which 
form such an obstacle to the reception of Christianity and 
civilisation. 

Another difficulty started by some is, that slavery being an 
internal institution of the countries where it exists, it is there- 
fore unconstitutional for other Powers to interfere with it. 
But the slave-trade is now an internal institution of Africa , 
and still no one doubts the propriety of efforts for its repression 
on the part of all nations, on the ground, that it is a crime 
against our common humanity. But slavery also is a crime 
against humanity, and, being such, all men and all nations 
are entitled to exert their moral influence against it. 

Some persons describe slavery as a patriarchal institution, 
and dwell upon the happiness of the slave in Mussulman 
countries, overlooking altogether the fact that for every 
single slave who arrives in Turkey and Egypt four or more 
have perished. 

Let those who think thus imagine the slaves as perfectly 
happy, but then, let them at least remember that, while the 
system exists, Africa must continue a lost continent. It is, 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 



however, certain that the negroes waste away in those 
countries — it is said the second generation of negroes is 
rarely found in Turkey, and that the third is never seen. 
Hence the demand for fresh victims creates an ever-flowing 
stream from Africa. Sir Bartle Frere, in the Blue Book 
presented to the Houses of Parliament in 1873, states 
that, " The correspondence of the Central African Vicariate 
Apostolic extends over countries roughly estimated at hav- 
ing a population of 80,000.000 of negroes, between the Red 
and Arabian Seas on the east, and the Atlantic on the west ; 
and the annual drain consequent on slavery is estimated by 
the Superior of the Mission at 1,000,000." 

Dr. Livingstone calculated that not more than one slave 
in five arrived at his destination, and on some routes not one 
in nine. This does not include the loss of life caused by the 
torture of boys for the markets of Egypt and Turkey, under 
which two out of every three perish. 

These Eastern Powers have, in time past, been peculiarly 
desirous of standing well with England, and it can scarcely 
be doubted that had her moral influence been with more 
perseverence brought to bear on the subject, slavery, and 
consequently the slave-trade — both negro and Circassian — 
would have ceased long ago. 

The evil institution cannot be much longer maintained. 
If Great Britain will not act, in all human probability Russia 



8 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

will do SO, and take the honour, as she has recently done in 
reference to slavery in Khiva. Great credit is due to Russia 
for her manner of dealing with slavery in Khiva. Had a 
temporising policy with regard to slavery been pursued, the 
Khivese would have been subjected to far more trouble and 
annoyance. Gradual schemes of dealing with slavery would 
have unsettled everything and have settled nothing. 

It has too long been the practice of England quietly to dis- 
regard her treaty claims and to acquiesce in the existence of 
slavery and the slave-trade in the Eastern Nations. Should 
no 'change pretty speedily take place Russia will probably 
step in and make an end of both. 

It is sometimes said, even by statesmen, that as civilisation 
advances and European ideas come to prevail among the 
Eastern nations, slavery and the slave-trade will cease to 
exist, as a matter of course. 

However plausible this idea may be, facts in this particular 
case are against it. Slavery and civilisation are at this 
moment increasing side by side in Egypt. Slaves, in a 
certain sense, are an article of luxury. The advance of civi- 
lisation and the increase of wealth in Egypt have been 
followed by an increase in the number of those who can 
afford to purchase and maintain slaves. 

Another class of persons are slow to believe that it is 
necessary to do away with slavery in order to destroy the 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 



slave-trade ; they still cling to the mistaken idea that the 
traffic can be abolished by force alone in Africa, and slavery 
be at the same time retained — an opinion which neither past 
history nor passing events in any way warrant. 

On this subject Sir Bartle Frere — who has done so much 
for humanity, and whose judgment and experience entitle his 
opinions to the greatest attention — thus expressed himself on 
a recent occasion in Glasgow : — 

" We may do what we can in the way of violent suppression, 
but we shall never put an end to the slave-trade till we put 
an end to slavery. We must let slave-holding countries — 
Egypt, Turkey, and others — understand that they will not 
be admitted into the brotherhood of civilised nations unless 
they abjure slavery." 

One of the professed objects of the late expedition of Sir 
Samuel Baker was the forcible suppression of the slave-trade 
in Africa. Beyond the destruction of a few slave hunters' 
stations, which would probably be quickly restored when his 
back was turned, little has been effected by all that expenditure 
of blood and treasure. Many of those who accompanied 
him perished. Large numbers of natives were ruthlessly 
slaughtered, their villages burnt, and their cattle seized. 
The murderous and oppressive character of the expedition 
was exposed in the . Times by Mr. M 'William, the chief 
engineer of the expedition, but Sir Samuel does not appear 



10 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

to have deemed it prudent to attempt any answer to these 
charges in his recent work. 

Mr. M 'William writes :— 

" If Sit Samuel Baker wishes at any time for my testi- 
mony as to the barbarous manner in which the expedition 
was conducted, the wholesale murders, pillage, and ruin of 
the country, he is welcome to it ; or should the Royal Geo- 
graphical Society or any body of gentlemen wish for any 
information respecting that futile expedition, I shall be glad 
to give it previous to my departure from this country." * 

" . . . . Mr. Baker also states that Sir Samuel had no in- 
tention of allowing raids to be made on the natives in future. 
One of the first acts of Sir Samuel, after the farce of annexing 
the country had been gone through, was to make a raid on a 
small tribe near us, taking their cattle, to the number of 5,000, 
besides some thousands of sheep ; he also took possession of 
all their plantations of grain, leaving the people in a state of 
starvation. Orders were issued at the same time that all 
natives found near the camp were to be shot down, irrespec- 
tive of age or sex. This was strictly carried out. The brutal 
details of these cold-blooded murders I would rather not relate. 
Out of the numerous raids made upon the unoffending natives 
near Gondokoro, many of them were led by Sir Samuel in 

* Sec Appendix B. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. II 

person, and cattle and sheep to the number of over 30,000 
captured, and their houses plundered arid wantonly burned 
down. Their cattle were not stoleh solely for the use of the 
troops in camp, but were to be given to the various tribes 
up the country on condition of their serving Sir Samuel. 
Naturally the poor creatures resisted as well as they could, 
but what could they do against fire-arms ? Mr. Baker 
further states that Sir Samuel always wished to preserve 
peace, but when the Bari war broke out the only chance of 
success depended on military vigour. The only Bari war 
that ever existed was a night attack on our cattle inclosures 
by the Laquois tribe, which was not successful. None of our 
troops were either killed or wounded in the affair. After this 
Sir Samuel made war on the Belignan tribes, massacring 
them in great numbers, and burning up their country. They 
had taken no part in the raid made by the Laquois on our 
cattle, but as they were not so powerful, and were much 
more convenient to be got at, Sir Samuel preferred to operate 
on them as an example to the Laquois tribe 

" Mr. Baker concludes with saying that if a military ex- 
pedition is sent to annex an extensive country war is a 
natural consequence, as the history of the world can testify. 
True, but scenes such as I have depicted are not to be met 
with in modem history." 

What will be the result of the new expedition, undertaken 



12 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

by Colonel Gordon, remains to be seen. The whole affair is 
at present a war of conquest and aggression, in which one 
side is armed with the most destructive weapons which science 
and art can produce — ^the other, with the rudest arms only, in 
vain attempts to defend their country and their homes. In a 
single affray, conducted by one of Colonel Gordon's officers, 
no less than eighty-two natives were killed. 

In all these expeditions it should be borne in mind that 
the cause of the natives is never heard. We only hear the 
statements of the Europeans who enter into these engage- 
ments, and they go so equipped and armed that, it has been 
forcibly remarked, their lives are insured. When any great 
amount of slaughter has been committed the aggressors con- 
gratulate one another on their bravery and gallant bearing, 
and the world applauds. 

But do these Egyptian raids effect any permanent good ? 
The first undertaken, in point of time, was that by the Pasha 
of Egypt, in 1857, when it was declared, as the result, that 
slavery in Khartoum and the Soudan was abolished. 

Then followed the expedition of Musa Pacha, in 1862, at 
the conclusion of which a similar declaration was made, but 
notwithstanding all this the slave-trade has since raged in 
those parts and depopulated some of the finest districts in 
that part of Africa. 

The slave-trade has never yet been destroyed by such 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 13 

means, although occasionally it has been diverted into fresh 
channels. Knowing this, it is a little remarkable that some 
persons decry every other course of action. 

People of this class never grow weary of pouring contempt 
upon what they are pleased to call, the ''fanatical school of 
humanitarians," ignoring the fact that if there be a fanatical 
school of humanitarians, there is also a fanatical school of 
rapine and blood. 

Opinions differ greatly as to the sincerity of the professions 
of the Khedive on the subject of slavery. The impres- 
sion which the writer received on one occasion, in an 
interview with His Highness, was, that he was perfectly 
sincere in his desire to see his country clear of the stain 
of slavery. But a solution of the question will probably be 
found in the fact that His Highness — who above all things 
desires to stand well with the European nations, and who 
sees the terrible consequence which must some day fall upon 
Egypt if slavery is allowed to continue — ^would be glad to 
make Egypt a free country, but he stands in fear of some 
of the more opulent of the European mercantile and financial 
class in Egypt, who make ehormous profits out of the present 
state of things, and are afraid of the effect which any great 
change might have upon their pecuniary interests. This 
probably is not unknown in the Foreign Office, and, if so, 
we must confidently hope that the British Cabinet will 



14 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

assure the Khedive that he will receive in this matter its 
firm and unhesitating support. 

If His Highness will decree the entire abolition of 
slavery, and accompany the act by the manumission of his 

m 

own slaves he will lay a sure foundation for the stability 
and happiness of his country. 

The Sultan of Onan has decreed that all slaves brought 
into his dominions shall be absolutely free. The Ruler of 
Vittou and Mongogani, has abolished both slavery and the 
slave-trade, — these countries are represented as highly pros- 
perous. 

There need be no doubt but that Egypt and Turkey can 
do the same, and will do it whenever they are made aware 
that Great Britain is really in earnest in the matter. 

The ambition of the Khedive is to found a great empire 
in the Valley of the Nile ; to succeed in this he must 
part with slavery — the means are at all times within his 
power. 

Unhappily, however, of late, instead of taking any step in 
the right direction, when he has acted at all in reference to 
slavery, he has moved in the direction of strengthening the 
institution in Egypt. Previous to 1873 a slave fleeing from 
his master might claim his freedom, and in some cases obtain 
it. But in the summer of that year His Highness issued an 
order to the Chief of the Police to the effect that no slave 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 15 

should obtain his liberty unless his master would come for- 
ward and testify that he was not under a charge of stealing 
or any other crime. 

Of course the masters are not slow to use the pretence 
suggested by the Government. The supposed power, there- 
fore, of a slave to obtain his liberty on application to the 
authorities proves too often a delusion. 

Should the present war of aggression prove successful, 
of course the newly-annexed dominions will be slave 
country. 

Will the European Powers, and will America, stand by and 
see at the present day a new slave empire created, or rather 
an annexation of enormous extent, in which slavery, if not 
the slave-trade also, will have full play? 

That it will be a Slave Power may be looked upon as 
an absolute certainty, provided the annexation takes place 
previous to the abolition of slavery in Egypt. 

At the present moment England, France and America 
may, in a certain sense, be said to patronise slavery in the 
East. Their Consuls in those countries appoint agents in 
the principal towns and centres who are supporters of slavery 
and owners of slaves. Over the roofs of their houses wave 
the flags of Christian nations, and under them are the slaves 
of these Consular Agents. 

It is a melancholy fact that the representatives of England 



l6 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

and America — the two freest nations in the world — should 
appear to any extent to be indifferent to the subject, and 
should, by some of their arrangements, rather support slavery 
than discourage it. 

The following remarks are taken from a very important 
paper written in Egypt, by Sir Bartle Frere, on his route 
to Zanzibar : — 

" It can hardly escape so enlightened a ruler as His. 
Highness that slavery is in itself a canker which must eat 
into the vitals of a country like Egypt, whose prosperity 
depends in so large a degree on the industry of the agricul- 
tural class. .... His Highness expressed a hope that the 
stoppage of the supply of slaves from the interior would 
ultimately tend towards a gradual diminution and final extinc- 
tion of slavery in Egypt. I feel that all experience is against 
this expectation. Whilst the demand continues I believe it to 
be practically impossible to cut off the supply. This is especially 
the case where the sources of supply are so many and spread 
over so large an area that ages would hardly suffice to 
reach them all by separate measures of repression. But if 
the demand is extinguished the object is at once effected 
and the trade must cease." 

"The Khedive now rules over tens of millions of negroes, of 
various races, all prolific, docile, and capable of great physical 
as well as moral and intellectual, improvement. But, what- 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 17 

ever may be the capacity of the higher races, few, if any, 
approach to the standard of civilisation long since reached 
by the lowest orders in Egypt proper. What is to be the 
destiny of these negro races ? Every year decreases the 
obstacles to intercourse between the Upper and Lower Nile. 
It is quite conceivable and probable that these obstacles may 
be so far diminished as the enlightened and advanced projects 
of the Khedive for railways, improved navigation of the Nile, 
&c., are developed, that the great negro storehouse of labour 
may become easily available to Lower Egypt, But on what 
conditions ? If slavery did not exist in Egypt, the conditions 
would be mutually advantageous to both races. If, however, 
slavery continues to exist, free negroes will not come there 
voluntarily, and negro labour can only come as slaves and 
Helots." 

**What a curse and social canker such a state of things 
must prove cannot escape the observation of His Highness 
and his advisers, who may see in the various parts of the 
world the difficulties arising from an Imperial dynasty of 
foreign sovereigns, a rich and luxurious middle class of 
natives holding honest free labour in contempt, and a labour- 
ing class of Helots and slaves. To those who can imagine 
such a condition of society (and it seems to me imminent in 
Egypt unless slavery is abolished), it must be evident that 
such social conditions are not only unnatural, hideous, and 

c 



l8 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

dangerous in themselves, but of a character which no 
European civilised power would like to see extended. With 
the Lower Nile free soil, the Khedive, ruling over the upper 
provinces inhabited by negro races, will be truly at the head 
of a constantly advancing African civilisation. All reason- 
able civilised men will be glad to see his influence extending. 
As matters stand at present they will hesitate to regard his 
influence as decidedly beneficent even in the darkest comers 
of Central Africa. They will always be asking, " Is His 
Highness's latest acquisition in Central Africa to be a fresh 
field for the triumphs of civilisation and order, or a fresh 
hunting-ground for the slave trader ?" 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. I9 



CHAPTER II. 

Slave-trade in Affghanistan — The Ameer subsidised by England — 
Supplied with Arms used in carrying on the Slave-trade — Slavery 
on the Gold Coast — Slavery and the Slave-trade in Madagascar. 

It is perhaps not very surprising, when the extent of the 
dominions and dependencies of Great Britain are considered, 
that slavery and the slave-trade should sometimes unex- 
pectedly be found to exist within its borders, though, when 
this is the case, it must be matter of humiliation and regret. 

It has recently been brought to light in England, by the 
indefatigable Dr. Leitner, the principal of the Government 
College at Lahore, that a large and barbarous slave-trade is 
carried on by the Ameer of Affghanistan, who is a quasi 
feudatory of Great Britain, by whom he is regularly supplied 
with improved Snider rifles and a large subsidy. 

Barbarous raids are continually carried on, on the neigh- 
bouring tribe of Siah Posh Kafirs, which at present num- 
bers about 300,000, but is threatened with destruction. The 
people are described as a noble race, supposed to be the 
descendants of a settlement of Christians of remote antiquity. 
Armed only with rude weapons they are unable to resist 

c 3 



20 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

the Affghans with the Sniders supplied to their enslavers by 
the Indian Government. 

In reference to this subject the Editor of Public Opinion, at 
Lahore, wrote in May, 1874 : — " It is well known, that slaves 
are purchased by British subjects within the boundaries of British 
territory y and that many a beautiful Siah Posh girl has been torn, 
from her relatives and friends^ and has ended her days in misery 
in the harems of our native fellow-subjects. It is well-know^n, 
to every one well acquainted with the Kafirs, that within the 
last few years numerous villages of the Siah Posh have 
been conquered by the Affghan Mohammedans, almost solely 
on account of the high market value of female slaves from 
Kafiristan; and it ought to be well known, although we 
believe it is not as well known as it should be, that there are 
agents for the purchase of slaves, who carry on their unholy 
traffic EVEN IN British territory." 

In speaking in a public meeting of the Anti-Slavery 
Society in London, Dr. Leitner said : — 

" Then comes the case of our ally, the Ameer of Cabool. 
Whether he can be called a feudatory is perhaps not techni- 
cally correct, but there is not the least doubt that he lives by 
our breath, and the prestige which we give him; and in 
practically acknowledging his infant son, and giving the 
Ameer money and arms, we have certainly assumed the posi- 
tion of a ' paramount ' power towards him. Now, if he is to 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 21 

desen/e our support, all I can say is, that, the * paramount ' 
power being a civilised one, the quasi-ftudsLtovy power 
should conduct itself as a civilised one also. Now, there 
•exist under the Ameer some populations more or less 
savage, some of which perhaps are not entitled to very 
great consideration, but all of which are deserving of 
consideration as human beings; others, again, are most 
emphatically deserving our protection, and these are the 
Siah Posh Kafirs. These Kafirs consider themselves the 
brothers of the Europeans — they are neither Hindoos nor 
Mohammedans, but it has been said have a sort of quasi Chris- 
tianity — increasing as it were, if it could possibly be increased, 
our sympathy for them. This is the race that is now suc- 
cessfully preyed upon by the Ameer. I say successfully, 
because it has been certainly successful since we have pro- 
vided the Ameer of Cabool with improved fire-arms. These 
people have for ages maintained their independence, and even 
the Ameer of Cabool has not been able wholly to conquer 
them. Some believe that the Siah Posh Kafirs are descend- 
ants of a colony planted by Alexander himself; but whether 
that be so or not, this race will soon be exterminated; unless 
this Society and the public generally move in the matter. 

*' The Russians have done a great deal in stopping slavery 
on one side of Central Asia. All honour to the Emperor 
Alexander." 



22 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

The attention of Lord Salisbury having recently been 
turned to this slave-trade there is good ground to believe 
that his Lordship, with his usual promptitude, will deal 
properly with the affair. 

The slavery in the British Settlements on the West Coast 
of Africa, which has so long been a reproach to Great 
Britain, has now received its death-blow by the decided and 
judicious course taken by Lord Carnarvon, but it will require 
great watchfulness and firmness on the part of the Foreign 
Office if its policy is to become really effectual. It is also 
equally necessary that the British public should continue to 
take an interest in the case. 

The greatest difficulties will probably be those raised by 
European merchants. 

On this subject it has been well observed : — 

" The memorials of the native chiefs to the Queen and to 
her representative at the Gold Coast are evidently of Euro- 
pean origin. They clothe native feelings in civilised ideas 
and arguments. These docuixients might very well have 
proceeded from a conference of American or West Indian 
planters when emancipation impended over the slave-owners 
of the Southern States or Jamaica. We hear prophecies of 
the entire destruction of the palm oil trade, and of agricul- 
tural production, of the disorganisation of society, of a 
servile war, of the impoverishment of the masters and the 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 23 

violence of their former slaves, and of another Ashantee 
invasion, if the policy of immediate manumission, proclaimed 
and partially acted upon by Governor Strahan, should be 
insisted on. The chiefs appeal — in language familiar in the 
mouths of more civilised champions of vested interests — 
against the violation of the rights of property. But there is 
no help for it now. The position taken up in the proclama- 
tion of Governor Strahan cannot be departed from. England 
has, prudently or imprudently, charged herself with a work 
at the Gold Coast which she must bring, at whatever cost, 
to a successful issue. Freedom must exist there as in every 
other part of the Queen's dominions. The deepest convic- 
tions of the nation and its keenest sense of honour prohibit 
any connivance with slavery within the limits of the British 
Empire." 

The position of Madagascar with regard both to slavery 
and the slave-trade is anomalous. The importation of 
slaves and the conversion of her people to Christianity, run 
side by side. The customary atrocities of slavery in other 
places are found in Madagascar; — families are separated 
— the slaves bought and sold like cattle. Slave markets 
exist in Antananarivo and many other towns. The address 
forwarded sometime ago by the Paris Anti-Slavery Bureaux, 
to Queen Ranovalomanjake and her prime-minister, Rainil- 
aiarioony, has probably at length produced some effect. 



24 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

A proclamation was issued by the Queen last October, 
declaring free all slaves brought into the Island since June, 
1865, the date of the treaty made with England, America, 
and France, for the suppression of the slave-trade. This, 
though only a beginning, is a step forward, and highly 
creditable to the Queen of Madagascar. 

The position of a missionary in that country, as in all 
others where slavery exists, is one of delicacy and difficulty, 
but the Gospel should not be separated from its morality. 
The lesson taught by the great war in America ought not 
to be lost upon the present generation. Had the ministers 
of the Christian religion in the United States performed 
their duty that war might never have occurred. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 25 



CHAPTER III. 

Slavery and the Slave-trade in the Portuguese Settlements on the East 
Coast of Africa and the African Island of St. Thomas. 

The slave-trade is still extensively carried on in the 
Portuguese settlements on the East Coast of Africa. The 
Portuguese Government, which is bound by treaty to suppress 
it, is generally reticent on the subject, and as we have had 
no Consul at Mozambique, the capital of those extensive 
settlements, since 1858, it is on rare occasions that the veil 
which covers that dark part of Africa is lifted. 

The principal traffic in the Mozambique Channel still is 
the slave-trade, and probably the principal market beyond 
the sea, Madagascar. The Portuguese ministers allege 
that the over-sea slave-trade cannot be large, because the 
seizure of their vessels is rare. 

But the traffic is carried on in Arab dhows, and when 
seizures take place the Portuguese escape the stigma. The 
following passage from the evidence of Captain Sullivan, 
before the Select Committee of the House of Commons, 
shows the working of the affair : — 

" Another reason why the fact of the Portuguese sharing 



26 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

in this slave-trade does not come under observation is, that 
it is carried on by them in Arab dhows, under the Arab flag ; 
and thus when these vessels are captured, the stigma is cast 
on the Sultan. Moreover, they have recently adopted the 
title of * free negroes ' for the slaves, and have established a 
system of passports in vessels carrying their own flags, in 
consequence of which, detection — or, at any rate, capture 
and condemnation — are next to impossible. Ask any of the^ 
ten thousand negroes that crowd the streets of Mozambique 
where they come from, and the reply is the same as that of 
the slaves captured on board of the dhows : — stolen, dragged 
from their homes and families, sold and bought, sold and 
bought again, and brought from the markets on the mainland 
to this place, where they are worse off" than they were before. 
" On the 6th of September, we boarded such a Portuguese 
schooner as is referred to above, bound from Quilimane River 
south to Mozambique Harbour, with several slaves on board. 
Amongst them were four Monginda children, from five to 
ten years of age, whom a Banyan (a British subject), of 
Mozambique, who was on board, claimed and showed pass- 
ports for, under the name of ' free negroes,' signed by the 
Portuguese authority of Quilimane. These children could 
speak no language intelligible either to our interpreter, or to 
the Portuguese or Banyans on board the schooner; and 
although we put some questions to them, and tried by signs 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 27 

to make them understand us, it was all in vain, which proved 
that they had only recently been brought from the interior. 
The case was most palpable, yet we could not take the risk 
of detaining the vessel and sending her to the Cape, the 
only place to which we could legally send her, on account of 
the passports and her unseaworthiness. Never conceiving 
it possible, however, that the Governor could have decided 
that these children, and the other negroes on board, were not 
slaves, I sent her into Mozambique, to obtain his opinion of 
destroying her, if they were declared to be slaves. This cer- 
tainly was a severe test of the honesty of the profession of the 
Portuguese with respect to the abolition of the slave-trade, 
and it proved too severe for them. The Governor assured me 
that they were ' free negroes ' and had passports." 

The Blue-Book of 1873 contains the following remarks in 
a paper addressed by Captain Elton to Sir Bartle Frere : — 

"At Quilimane and on the Zambesi, on the adjoining 
rivers, such as the Mecusa and the Mariagomo, and especially 
on the Angoxa, the question of implication in slave traffic 
becomes serious, and the extreme difficulty with which reli- 
able information can be collected is hardly appreciable to 
people at a distance. The involved interest, distrust, and, 
above all, the intense jealousy of all foreign interference, 
combine to render both a tedious and disagreeable task. The 
custom of permitting individuals to own small armies of 



28 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

slaves has worked the complete destruction of all law, and 
the seeds of rebellion have been sown broadcast by the 
atrocities which slave-hunting marauders have committed 
on tribes whose natural bent it would be to dwell in peace. 

"The inland slave-trade cannot be said to have been sup- 
pressed. About Christmas 1870, a gang of about one hundred 
women and children were brought down from the Shire by a 
native chief to the town of Quilimane for sale. I arrived 
there from Mozambique about the loth January, 1871, when 
the matter was openly talked about, and I saw a number of 
the recently-purchased slaves." 

The necessity of a Consul at Mozambique has on several 
occasions within the last few years been pressed upon the 
British Government, and more recently has been strongly 
recommended by Sir Bartle Frere. 

Such an appointment, if suitably made, could scarcely fail 
to assist both in the suppression of the slave-trade, and 
slavery, and in the substitution of lawful commerce in its place. 
But everything depends upon the selection of the right man. 
Although Portugal has passed more than one Act for the 
abolition of slavery, she is still a slave-holding Power. 

In the year 1858 Portugal passed a law declaring that 
Slavery should be entirely suppressed throughout her depend- 
encies in twenty years. In 1869 she passed another law, the 
first article of which runs thus — 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 29 

" The condition of slavery is abolished throughout all the 
territories of the Portuguese monarchy, from the date of publi- 
cation of the present decree." 

But the third article provides that the services of the said 
freedmen shall pertain to the persons to whom they 
had previously belonged, thus rendering the act perfectly 
valueless. A man in such a position is a slave by whatever 
name he may be called. 

Slavery exists not only in the East African settlements 
of Portugal, but also, so far as is known, in her little island 
of St. Thomas, on the West Coast. 

To this island a species of slave-trade was carried on under 
the name of libertos, so recently as 1866. 

Portugal should now pass an Act making slavery illegal 
in all her possessions, and the slave-trade piracy. In no 
other way will she be able to fulfil her Treaty engagements, 
and by no other course will she effect so much for the good 
of her subjects. Portugal was the first to introduce slavery 
and the slave-trade, let her not be the last to abolish them. 

One thing redounds to the honour of the present King of 
Portugal and his ministers — they have abolished the slave- 
trade recently carried on between Macao and Peru. In that 
traffic it is humiliating to know that the number of British 
vessels employed was greater than those of any other nation. 

It is not very satisfactory to know that about the time 



30 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

the British Government was engaged in pleading with the 
Portuguese Government to suppress the Chinese coolie traffic 
at Macao, it should have been treating with the Viceroy of 
Canton for the reopening of the traffic to the West Indies. 
This permission having been obtained, the public ought to 
be informed, how many of the British Slavers rendered idle 
at Macao are to be employed in conveying the Chinese to 
Demarara and the other English colonies. Many of the 
vessels have been built in British. ports, and are furnished 
with iron gratings and other slave-trade equipments, stored 
away in the hold ready to be brought out and fixed when 
the vessel is clear of the British waters, or on arrival at the 
port of embarkation. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE, 31 



CHAPTER IV. 

Slavery in Brazil — Rapid Decrease in the number of Slaves — Extra- 
ordinary Death-Rate — Inefficiency of the Abolition Law of 187 1 — 
Urgent Necessity of Freedom. 

There is a common but mistaken notion that slavery has 
been abolished in Brazil, The Christian Emperor of Brazil 
still rules over the largest slave population in the world. 

The present number of slaves in his dominions is about a 
million and a half. In 1818, according to a census made by 
order of King John, the number was two millions. This 
shows a decrease of half a million. But to this decrease 
must be added the number of fresh slaves introduced into 
Brazil from Africa between 1818 and 1851, during the greater 
part of which time the slave-trade was carried on in violation 
of treaties with Great Britain. 

The late Sir Thomas Powell Buxton, in 1839, estimated 
the number of Africans introduced at that time into Brazil 
at the rate of one hundred thousand per annum. 

Writing ifi 1839, he says : ** I should conjecture that the 
real amount would be moderately rated at one hundred 
thousand, brought annually into these five Brazilian ports. 



33 THE I-OST CONTINENT. 

But as the question is, not how many I suppose, but how 
many I can show to be landed, I must confine myself to what 
I can prove — and I have proved that seventy-eight thousand 
three hundred and thirty-one were landed at five ports in 
Brazil, in the course of twelve months, ending at the 30th 
June, 1830." 

What has become of the absolute decrease of the half- 
million, and the total imports of seventy or a hundred thou- 
sand fresh victims per annum through a long course of years ? 
What are the causes which have produced a death-rate like 
this ? Private manumissions have been numerous ; but they 
will not materially account for such a result. 

M. Passy, in speaking on this subject in the Academy of 
Science in Paris in 1870, stated, on the authority of M. 
Gobineau, the French Minister at the Brazilian Court, that 
the number of slaves then in Brazil was two millions in 
place of four millions in 1852. Whether these figures be 
perfectly accurate or not, there can be no doubt that a rate 
of mortality exists which cannot be accounted for on the 
score of the climate of the country, which is peculiarly 
adapted to the negro race, or by any known satisfactory cause. 

In view of such an appalling decrease in the labouring 
population of the country, it is not surprising that the 
statesmen of Brazil should see the necessity of attracting 
emigrants to the country. They have made many attempts 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 33 

in this direction, but so far without success. In every 
country slavery, by degrading labour, keeps free men out 
of the field ; this was the case in the Southern States of 
America previous to the civil war. Emigrants from all 
parts of the world flocked into the free states, but they in- 
variably shunned the slave states. 

To these facts, patent to everybody else, the Brazilian 
statesman shuts his eyes. The Empire of Brazil is almost 
the largest in the world, with virgin lands and resources that 
might be turned into marvellous blessings, not only to the 
people of Brazil, but to all civilized nations. 

In every point of view the interest of Brazil would be pro- 
moted by a law for the entire removal of slavery. There 
appeared some probability that such a measure would be 
enacted in 1871, when the Liberal party was in power, and a 
Bill was prepared, which, though defective and insufficient, 
was intended in good faith to put an end to slavery. But 
the Conservative party in Brazil got the upper hand, and 
though originally opposed to all interference with slavery, 
passed an Act to prevent what they thought a worse thing 
from befalling them. 

The Act passed bears the marks of its parentage, and under 
it slavery may yet last fifty years. The slaves belonging to 
the State and the religious houses were to be set free ; but 
the bulk of the slaves are left in hopeless bondage for life. 

D 



34 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

The children born of slave mothers after the passing of the 
Act were to be free, but are to ** remain in the power and to 
be under the authority of the owners, till the age of twenty- 
one." 

As there are many noble-minded men in Brazil opposed to 
the further continuance of slavery, and as there is no pre- 
judice against colour or race in that country, there are fewer 
difficulties than usual in dealing with the evil. It is, besides, 
well known that the Emperor desires to see slavery disappear 
from his dominions. 

If this be done in safety it must be done in time, for sooner 
or later Providence vindicates His own laws. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE, 35 



CHAPTER V. 

The Asiatic Slave-trade — The French Colonies — British West Indies 
and Mauritius — Chinese in Peru. 

Whilst the attention of the world is so imperiously called 
to the slave-trade in Africa, it must not be overlooked that a 
new slave-trade has sprung up within the last forty years, 
under the name of Immigration. 

As the late Honorable Charles Sumner truly observed, 
the old enemy has started up under an alias. 

Boston, Sth September, i86g. 
My dear Mr. Cooper,-^ 

I acknowledge with pleasure your favour of the 
4th August, and am glad to see our Anti-Slavery friends moving 
against the old enemy under an alias — [the labour traffic]. 

In conformity with your suggestion I have requested the De- 
partment of State to direct our Consuls and Consular Agents to 
make the desired inquiries. . . . 

I send you the letter of Senator Nabuco, of Brazil, on Eman- 
cipation, forwarded to me by the Brazilian Legation, at the 
request of the Senator. 

In acknowledging it, I felt it my duty to say that the Senator 
himself did not go far enough :— that the longer continuance 

.D 2 



36 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

of Slavery is inconsistent with the civilisation of the age, 
besides being essentially wrong ; and that it ought to be ter- 
minated at once. Of this I have no doubt. Slavery will end 
very soon in Cuba. It cannot remain much longer in Brazil. 
This earth will be fairer when this terrible blot is erased. 

I am grieved that you should not see my speech in its true 
character. It was an honest effort to state our case so that 
England should know it, believing that the first duty of States- 
manship is to remove all existing grievances between two 
countries, which cannot be done until the grievance is under- 
stood. There must be a diagnosis of the case before the remedy 
is discussed. 

In what I do now, I act according to those early sentiments of 
Peace, which are the dearest to my heart. I complain now of 
England as opening the way to war, God forbid ! 
Believe me, my dear friend, 

Sincerely yours, 

Charles Sumner. 

To. oppose free migration from one part of the world to 
another at the present day, would be simply absurd — to 
oppose the slave-trade under any name is a necessity. 

That the working of the present system of Immigration 
is not equally injurious in every country may be admitted ; 
but in all there are certain features that will not bear exami- 
nation. The vice of the immigration system as now carried 
on is, that it converts man into property. Previous to 
embarkation the immigrant must sign a contract, and imme- 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 37 

diately the contract is signed he becomes the property of 
another. The contract is a chain round his neck on his 
landing at his destination. He is then as much marketable 
property as an ordinary slave. 

The immigrants are in fact bought and sold like cattle, 
and in some countries the planter ordinarily puts the 
question: "What is the price of coolies to-day" — just as 
a merchant in London or Paris would inquire the rate of 
Exchange or the price of the Funds. 

The deplorable condition of the Chinese immigrants in- 
Cuba has often been described. Captain F. Trench Towns- 
hend in his work just published, as the result of personal 
observation, writes : — 

** Though the fate of the poor African slave in Cuba is 
horrible, that of the unfortunate Asiatic, who is serving 
under contract, struck me as even more pitiable. 

" The wan face, feeble frame, and dejected looks of the 
wretched Chinamen were absolutely painful to see. Having 
enjoyed the blessings of freedom up to the hour when his 
evil fate led him to quit his native country, the poor China- 
man is ill-treated on board ship in a fearful manner, and on 
reaching Cuba is bought, sold, subjected to the lash, and 
compelled to work like the negro slaves. Against such 
treatment his natural intelligence and inborn sense of free- 
dom rebel, and he either runs away and engages in some 



38 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

trade in the large towns or goes about a miserable heart- 
broken wretch. The law forbids their being subjected to the 
lash, or the sale of the contract against the will of the 
Chinaman contracted for; but in both respects the law is 
set at nought, and the Cuban buys and flogs his Chinese 
slave openly and with impunity. I asked what became of 
the Chinaman when his seven years* contract was ended. I 
was answered that the Government then got hold of them, 
so that not even after seven or more years of slavery does 
the unfortunate Chinaman regain his liberty. 

"That there was any course short of absolute prohibition 
of the export of coolies to the Spanish West Indies, and the 
forcible prevention of the traffic by the English fleet, likely 
to be of any benefit to poor John Chinaman, none, among 
those best able to judge, believed." 

The French Colonies. 

In the French Colonial possessions great oppression is 
known to exist — ^the coolies are marketable property, and 
have no such thing as efficient protection. A Commission of 
Inquiry into the whole subject was appointed in Paris last 
year, at the instance of M. Schcelcher, the gentleman to 
whom the credit of the abolition of slavery in the French 
colonies in 1848 is mainly due. The Report which is prepared 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 39 

has not yet been printed, but it is said that it will contain a 
sad exposure of the existing state of things. 

This may be inferred from the Report of the Under 
Secretary for India, in reference to the coolies in Reunion, 
moved for last summer, by Edward Jenkins, Esq., M.P., at 
the request of the Aborigines Protection Society. 

This report states that, ** in 1871, there were 771 com- 
plaints to the Consul. Of these 31*9 were for non-payment 
of wages, 30,649 francs being claimed and 6,530 recovered. 
There were 230 charges of ill-treatment, in six of which 
convictions were obtained, and 137 charges of breach of con- 
tract, with 53 convictions. The results in the remainder, 
as in 85 cases of * minor claims,' were not ascertained. In 
these last two years the complaint of excessive hours of 
labour being exacted is distinctly formulated by the Consul. 
Manifestly complaints made to the Consul only exhibit the 
extremest cases ; and there is reason to believe that the 
powers of the police were called into play to prevent access 
to the Consul, or to punish those who asserted their right. 
But as the reports are admittedly one-sided, and the Secre- 
tary of State has been urged to have the whole' question 
investigated, it will be well not to dogmatise here. The 
following figures, however, speak for themselves : — In 1868 
there were 19,069 committals to gaol, while 10,694 persons 
were sent to the ateliers de discipline. That is to say, there 



40 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

were 29,763 cases of punishment out of a population of 
180,000. According to Captain Segrave, 75 per cent, of 
these cases occurred among labourers, and 80 per cent, of 
the labourers were Indians. He estimates that more than 
one-third of the Indian population was continually in gaol. 
This must perhaps be taken cum grano,'* but it will remind 
the reader of the state of things in British West Indies, 
during the apprenticeship which preceded the total abolition 
of slavery. 

The condition of the coolies in the other French colonies, 
Cayenne, Guadaloupe, and Martinique, has been described in 
the public press as at least no better than that in Reunion. 

The Mauritius and the British West Indies. 

In the British West Indies the condition of the coolies 
varies much, but it cannot be said to be satisfactory in any 
of the Islands, whilst in the Mauritius cruelty and oppression 
have been rife. 

This view has been denied by some who have resided in 
the Mauritius, and who, therefore, ought to know ; but, un- 
happily for the statements of such people, the Report of the 
Police Commission of Inquiry instituted by the Governor, 
Sir A. H. Gordon, and printed with a thick volume of 
evidence, has, in the main, confirmed all the charges brought 
against the system. / 

/ 

/ 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 4I 

These charges were contained in a petition to the Governor 
signed by more than 9,000 old immigrants, that is immi- 
grants who had worked out their contracted period of service 
and therefore ought to have become once more free men. 
The details furnish a pitiable case of oppression, which has 
scarcely found its parallel in modern times. 

In order, as it would appear, to compel the coolie to enter 
a second time into contract, every obstacle has been placed 
in the way of his maintaining himself by free labour. He 
is not to move without a pass ; he must carry a descriptive 
ticket and his portrait wherever he goes; he is not even 
to work without a licence. The police may stop him any- 
where, and enter his dwelling at any hour of the day or 
night. He must produce all these things, and if any in- 
accuracy be detected, though it may not have arisen from 
any fault of his own, he may be thrown at once into prison. 

M. De Plevitz, a French gentlemen, performed a great 
service to humanity in rendering the coolies facilities for 
putting forward their wrongs. 

The report of the Commission opens with the words : — 
" We have found the statements in the Petition, although 
put in an exaggerated form, to be mainly justified by the 
law as it exists, under the ordinance of 1867, and the execu- 
tive regulations following thereon." 

The Commissioners proposed the repeal of a considerable 



42 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

number of the existing oppressive regulations — and also the 
repeal of the charge of one pound for a ticket, five shillings 
for Si permit to work, two shillings for a photograph, and "the 
licence duty of one pound imposed upon day labourers" 

How far these suggestions have been adopted is not yet 
known. A Royal Commission was appointed in June, 1872, 
which has not yet reported owing to the lamented illness of 
the Chief Commissioner. 

It is too late now to dwell' much on the origin of the 
coolie system in the British West Indies. When emanci- 
pation took place, though the institution of slavery was 
gone, the spirit of it remained in the island, and in the 
hearts of the people it had cursed. 

Low wages, irregular payments, or no payments at all, 
exorbitant cottage rents and fraudulent exactions drove the 
labourers from the estates to seek a livelihood in other ways. 
Hence the want of labour so far as it did exist, and the 
attempt to obtain a cheap supply. But the present system, 
mixed up as it is with fraud in its origin and force in its 
working, is probably the most expensive that can be employed. 
The excellent clergyman Henry Clark, of Trinity, Jamaica, 
says that he has often conversed with the more intelligent 
coolies, but that he never met with one who did not say that 
he had been deceived in India, nor one who did not view his> 
going to Jamaica as a calamity. 



slavery and the slave-trade. 43 

The Chinese in Peru. 

No words can describe the lot of the Chinese in Peru. 
The system commenced in 1849, between which year and 
1869, it appears that ninety thousand Chinese have perished 
in Peru. What are the causes which have produced this 
fearful mortality? 

The truest causes may probably be found in an important 
paper submitted by Mr. Murrov^r, to a meeting of the Asso- 
ciation for the Promotion of Social Science, in the latter 
year.* 

Mr. Murrow states that the rate of mortality on the 
passage from China to Peru in immigrant ships has certainly 
been twenty-five per cent. But the principal mortality takes 
place after arrival in Peru. The coolies in guano work are 
goaded to their labour under the lash. The taskmasters are 
tall, African negroes, "who are armed with a lash of four 

♦ What number of coolies have been sent from China to Peru since 
1 849 to the present time, I have no means of ascertaining, but certainly 
many more than 100,000. How many of these may be now living it 
is mere conjecture to compute. I feel pretty sure that not one hundred 
have ever returned to their native country (notwithstanding that the 
contracts express a servitude of five years only), so that the number 
remaining at present in Peru will correctly indicate the residue. I fsmcy 
10,000 would be found considerably over the mark. — " 7 be Cooiie 
Trade from China to Peru."" T. J. Murroto, Esq. 



44 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

plaits of cow-hide, five feet in length, and an inch and a half 
thick, tapering to a point." This weapon is little used during 
the early part of the day, but about four o'clock in the after- 
noon it is put in constant requisition, for the purpose of com- 
pelling the coolies, who, from weakness or other cause, fall 
short in the completion of their allotted task. 

" The slightest resistance is punished by a flogging, little 
short of murder, the first six or twelve cuts stifling the 
agonising cries which ring through the fleet. There is no 
tying-up, the nearest Chinaman being compelled, by a cut of 
the lash, to lay hold of an arm or leg, and stretch the miser- 
able suff'erer on his stomach on the guano. The mere weight 
alone of the lash makes their bodies shake, blackening their 
flesh at every blow, besides cutting into it like a sabre, and 
when a convulsive movement takes place a subordinate 
places his boot on the shoulders to keep the quivering body 
down." 

On this subject, in commenting on the able speech of 
Sir Charles Wingfield, in the House of Commons in 1873, 
the Times says : — 

" In Peru the fate of the imported coolies is even more abomi- . 
nable. They are sent to work in the guano pits on the islands 
which produce that unsavoury wealth ; they are beaten and 
chained and passed by bargain and sale from master to master, 
just as the negro slaves in the sugar plantations of the Southepn 



SLAVERY AND THB SLAVE-TRADE. 45 

States used to be. There is a military force to guard them, and 
to crush any violence to which despair may drive even the most 
patient and timid of men. Hope of escape, save by death, there 
is none; and hence suicide is a common practice, regularly 
estimated in the probable cost of the labour supply. This ghastly 
picture is confirmed in its bold outlines and its broad colours by 
the sober testimony of the official correspondence which has been 
laid before Parliament." 

Mr. Thomas, the American Minister at Lima, writing to 
the Secretary of State at Washington, in 1873, says : — 

" Having made careful inquiry on the subject, I am prepared 
to say that the treatment of these unfortunate Chinese, thus 
forced violently from their homes by the landholders of Peru, by 
whom crowds of them are employed, is more harsh than that to 
which slaves in the United States were formerly subjected. "» 

To recruit free men in China, imprison them in baracoons, 
guard them with soldiers, induce them to sign contracts, 
convey them to Peru and on arrival compel them by force to 
labour in the guano pits, is that which it might have been 
supposed no man could have been found to defend, but 
apologists have occasionally made their appearance, which 
shows that a man may be blinded with guano as effectually 
as with gold. 

It not unfrequently happens that when statements of op- 
pression and cruelty abroad find their way into the public press 



46 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

they are quickly followed by the counter-statements of those 
who have visited the countries where these evils are alleged 
to have taken place. The case of Peru forms no exception. 
The public are occasionally assured by eye-witnesses who 
have visited some of the larger haciendas in that country that 
all is right ; that the employers of labour, whether in town or 
country, are among the kindest and most considerate people 
on earth, and as to the Government of Peru it is most 
paternal, and watches over the Chinaman with the most 
solicitous care for his comfort and well-being. 

It is not to be supposed that these statements are either 
altogether untrue, or that they are not, in some instances, 
published in good faith by those who make them. 

Among the hundreds of large establishments in Peru, there 
are doubtless some where kindness and justice are the rule. 
The traveller not only sees on these estates nothing to offend 
his sense of justice, but on others also nothing comes before 
him to which he can take exception — they are all in holiday 
trim while he is there — ^he is hospitably entertained, and 
returns to his own country the warm advocate and defender 
of he knows not what. He has only seen the surface 
of things and his impressions are utterly at variance 
with the testimony of residents in Peru, both private and 
official. 

These remarks equally apply to what has occasionally 



SLAVERY AND. THE SLAVE-TRADE. 47 

taken place in British Colonies and foreign countries. The 
same thing prevailed during the struggle in this country for 
the Abolition of Slavery in the West Indies. 

The number of eye-witnesses to the perfect happiness and 
prosperity of the slave was so great that the work of abolition 
seemed likely to be impeded in its progress, and probably 
would have been so had not the death-rate in the West 
Indies providentially turned up. When it was found that 
the census showed a decrease in eleven years of fifty-three 
thousand souls these commendations of slavery lost their force. 

A new Treaty has just been negotiated between the Em- 
peror of China and Peru, providing for the continuance or 
renewal of Chinese coolie traffic. 

The provisions of the treaty, with one exception, appear 
fair on the face; but it is to be regretted that any treaty 
should have been entered into pending the inquiry then 
being made by a Chinese Commissioner in Peru. 

The British Envoy in Pekin has had a hand in the negocia- 
tion. His intentions are not to be doubted ; but as no 
treaty, however worded, Can put an end to the mischief of 
the present system, it is deeply to be regretted that if called 
in at all, he did not enter his emphatic protest against 
the whole affair. Of course the Chinese Commission of 
Inquiry in Peru is at an end. The Commissioners have 
returned to Shanghai — the first unfavourable fruit of the 



48 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

new treaty. It is stated that another Commission is to be 
appointed, which must, however, be taken for what it is worth. 

All that has taken place in Peru, for the last twenty-five 
years, ought not to have been overlooked, neither should it 
have been forgotten that the Peruvian Government have 
made many promises of amendment which have never been 
fulfilled. In the list of property for sale coolies still figure 
with sheep, oxen and pigs. No treaties can cure the present 
state of things, the system is bad and the contract made in 
China is the vice of it. 

It is stated that the Peruvian Government has decided to 
take the immigration system into its own hands, in order to 
prevent in future the fearful mortality which has occurred at 
sea. This, as far as it goes, may be successful, but it does 
not touch the main objections to the system. The immigrant 
enters the country in bonds, can neither choose his master or 
his employment, and is bought and sold at the market price. 

Another argument put forth is that many of the Chinese 
have become prosperous in Lima, the capital. It would h&l 
strange if, out of such enormous numbers, some had not 
survived and done well for themselves. But the proportion 
of such is so trifling that it cannot be successfully advanced 
in defence of the system. 

There are it is true a number of respectable Chinese mer- 
cantile firms in Lima, but they are mainly composed of 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 49 

Chinese from California — free emigrants who have never 
been brought under the bonds of labour contracts. 

It is asserted that the intentions of the Peruvian Govern- 
ment are good, and its laws humane; but even if this be true, 
it is well known that the executive is extremely weak even in 
the towns, — as to the outlying and distant haceindos, where 
the Chinese are principally employed, it is absolutely power- 
less. 

The Patriae b. Peruvian paper, writing about a year ago, 
remarks : — 

" The corporeal punishment applied to the Asiatics, who 
from whatever motive may have made themselves amenable 
to correction, is extremely severe ; it consists of lashes laid 
on in a manner which recalls, and even goes beyond, the 
barbarity of the Russian Knout, as it was practised during 
the existence of serfdom. 

*' The overseers who look after them are of an infinitely 
lower moral type than those who have been infamously im- 
mortalised by those who hsuve written about slavery. 

" Hundreds of these same workmen do their daily work, 
and retire to their sheds laden with chains, in the same 
manner as galley-slaves who fulfil their sentence labouring 
on public works. By what right do the masters of coolies 
use these penalties, or means of security, or how can they 
be justified ? 

E 



50 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

** The system of alimentation is quite deficient for the 
preservation and restoration of their strength; this, in a 
great measure, explains the numbers of blind Chinese which 
we see in our streets 

"Let Peruvian patriotism listen attentively, and the 
Christian charity which doubtless exists in the country hear 
what we are about to say. The negro slave on the Cuban 
ingenios is not so miserable^ by a long way, as the contracted 
coolie who comes to till the fields of Peru.'* 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 5 1 



CHAPTER VI. 

The Fiji Islands— ^The Contract System. 

The annexation of Fiji has been quickly followed by the 
introduction of the Polynesian Labour Act of 1868. 

The proclamation of the temporary Governor provides that 
the Act shall be the law under which the import of labour 
shall be regulated in Fiji, but that in some respects it shall 
be subject to modification. What changes are likely to be 
made are not yet fully known. But the Act is unsound 
in principle, and is in many respects so defective that it is 
impossible to view its introduction without regret. It will 
probably be generally admitted that it has not effected any 
of the objects for which it was passed. 

When the Act first reached this country from Queens- 
land, its various provisions were carefully examined by 
M. Chamerovzow, many years the able Secretary of the 
Anti-Slavery Society, and the result presented in due form 
to the Duke of Buckingham, then Secretary for the Colonies. 
The statement did not at the time receive the attention it 
deserved, but the working of the Act has vindicated the 
views then set forth. 

E 2 



52 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

Since the Act passed, the Carl outrage, with many other 
atrocities, have taken place ; some of the islands have been 
depopulated, and white life is now everywhere more insecure. 

That the Brisbane Act should have been thus hurriedly 
introduced into Fiji is deeply to be regretted. If the latest 
accounts from residents in the Fijis are correct, many of the 
more remote districts are at the present time scenes of 
oppression and cruelty never exceeded in the worst days of 
the worst slave colony. 

The Earl of Carnarvon has made a wise choice in 
appointing Sir Arthur Hamilton Gordon to the Governor- 
ship of Fiji. His Excellency has proved himself possessed 
of the highest qualifications for the arduous post: but it 
would surely have been wiser to have allowed time for him 
to reach his post previous to taking steps it may be difficult 
to retrace. 

The Fijis in British hands ought to have been made 
absolutely free and not contract labour settlements, with a 
population half free — half in bonds. 

Neither treaties, laws, or regulations, will avail to remove 
the evils of the present system. The contract system is the 
root of the mischief and must be abolished. It is agreed on 
all hands that the ignorant victims cannot comprehend the 
meaning of these contracts, and that no explanation can 
enable them to do so. The immigrants are in most cases 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 53 

alike ignorant of the language of the country to which they 
are taken, the kind of work they are expected to do, of the 
cost of living, and the climate. Bishop Patteson,* in refe- 
rence to the South Sea Islanders said, " I do not believe it 
possible for any traders to make a bond fide contract with any 
of the natives." The contracts are a fraud, and therefore 
not morally binding; this being so, they ought not to be 
made out of the country where the labour has to be done. 
If made, they ought not to be binding in law. By such a 
provision many of the evils of the present system would be 
remedied, and the right sort of people only might be expected 
to emigrate. 

The Government of the United States does not recognise 
these contracts, and has made it felony for American ships to 
carry coolies under labour contracts in any part of the world. 

In countries where all is, in the main, fair and right, such 
contracts are not needed, they are only required where the 
labour is forced and not properly requited. 

In reference to this subject Sir C. Wingfield has remarked : — 

" My hostility is confined to emigration carried on by the 
machinery of crimps, barracoons, agencies, and contracts which 
are merely instruments of coercion, and are not needed for coun- 
tries that offer real inducements to emigration. Thus Sir 
F. Bruce writes, *A Chinaman's object in emigrating is the ac- 

♦ See Appendix C, 



54 



THE LOST CONTINENT. 



quisition of wealth, and in the Straits full play is given to this 
motive by leasing land to him for sugar cultivation ; but he will 
not work as a slave, especially if he iinds advantage has been 
taken of him to obtain his labour at less than the market rates/ 
This remark is the key to the whole emigration question. A man 
emigrates to make his position better, not worse. To the countries 
which I have named the Chinese flock in crowds. Between China 
and California, especially, there is a constant stream of Chinese 
going and returning, owing to the facilities afforded by a splendid 
line of steamers. There is no instance on record of a rising on 
board any one of these vessels. The mortality is not above the 
death-rate on land. Sir R. MacDonell, who made the voyage in 
one of these steamers with 1,200 coolies on board, testifies to 
this. Such emigration is beneficial to the Chinese themselves ; 
but I utterly deny that any improving or civilising influences can 
be imparted under a system by which the so-called emigrants are 
kidnapped and coerced, and pass their lives in slavery, under 
masters who are governed by no motive but cupidity.*' 

The Government of Japan has recently absolutely pro- 
hibited these contracts on the ground of their immorality. 
The United States of America have marked their sense of 
the dishonesty of these contracts by an Act of Congress 
making it a penal offence to carry any indentured Chinese 
under their flag. A writer in the Times asks why Great 
Britain does not follow the example, and purge the country 
from all complicity with the acts of slavers and kidnappers. 

A fair remuneration for labour, cheap passage, the aid of 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 55 

friends and relatives, would be found sufficient to induce 
immigrants to flock to those countries where labour is re- 
quired, and where their condition would be made better. 

In the later days of British West Indian slavery, " wages 
or the whip" became an axiom; the same idea may now be 
conveyed in the words "wages or the contract." 

In addition to all the other evils involved in the system is 
that of temporary serfdom. When an estate is sold, the 
coolies go with the property and the other live-stock, and 
they have no more power to choose their masters than have 
the cattle on the estate. Thus it is seen, in the present 
day, that while one great nation puts an end to serfdom, 
another makes a beginning. 

Few things in past times have gained for England more 
honour in the world than the testimony she has borne 
against slavery and the slave-trade. Her exertions and her 
sacrifices to put down these evils have commanded the 
respect of all nations, and have given her an influence that 
should enable her to complete the work. 

But, unless a change speedily takes place, this influence 
will be impaired, if not destroyed. It cannot be otherwise 
when the true character and inherent evils of the contract 
labour trafiic come to be generally known. This conse- 
quence will not be obviated by any of the arguments com- 
monly adduced in defence of the system. The most potent 



56 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

of these is, perhaps, the statement that the produce of the 
colonies has been increased by it. The same reason might 
with equal force have been adduced in defence of slavery 
and the old slave-trade itself. In fact, this was the main 
argument of the importers of slaves formerly, and con- 
sidered a justification which rendered an appeal to moral 
considerations and the interests of humanity as altogether 
unnecessary. 

It would, however, be a great mistake to imagine that the 
prosperity of the colonies could not be increased by other 
and legitimate means. But were it not so, the pecujiiary 
interest of proprietors ought not surely to override all other 
considerations, and to blind the country to the guilt, misery, 
and destruction of life which have marked the contract 
system. 

To the United States and several other parts of the world 
coolies find their way in large numbers, because they are 
free and obtain the market price for their labour. This is 
the system to which England must come, if her colonies 
also are to be abundantly supplied with labour on conditions 
not immoral. 

It has been the custom of the British Government not to 
allow coolies to be introduced into slave colonies. The 
reasons for this course are obvious, and certainly apply with 
great force to Fiji, where all the evils of slavery are known 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 57 

to exist. In writing recently on this subject to the Fiji 
Times, the " Rev." Frederick Langham, District Chairman 
of the Wesleyan Missions, gives, in detail, a large number 
of cases of cruelty and oppression, which plainly show that, 
**in all its leading features, slavery exists in Fiji in its 
most odious and revolting character." 

It must not bs imagined that the South Sea Islanders* 
Protection Act will put an end to the new species of slave- 
trade among the Polynesian Islands. How far this Act is 
working in the right direction may, in part, be seen by the 
following letter recently received from the " Rev." R. H. 
Codrington, the successor of the lamented Bishop Patteson: — 

"On August 30th we were ashore at Ureparapara; a 
vessel was then lying in the bay, which we were told was 
* a good ship,' i.e. a trader in bfeche la mer, or something 
of that sort. We accordingly paid no attention to it, till, 
coming down from the village, we were told that it was ' a 
thief ship,* i.e. a labour vessel; and that several Motlay 
people had swam away from her in the night, because they 
had been improperly got, and that there were others who 
wanted to escape, but were afraid of the captain. John 
Selwyn and I went on board with a Motlay man, through 
whom we could perfectly well communicate with the boys 
in question by means of Mota. Four boys — one a Christian 
out of our school — declared to the face of the Government 



58 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

Agent through his own interpreter (for he refused to have 
anything to do with ours), that they did not wish to go to 
Queensland, and had not been properly engaged. Their 
story was that they had been asked to come on board by 
the native agent to see him, and then, on a boat coming 
back from the shore, had been told that it had been settled 
with their friends that they were to go — ^had been * bought.* 
I cannot tell, nor can any one, whether this was all true. 
I ha^e ascertained since that when the boys went on board 
they never told any one they were going to Queensland. 
But observe, the Government Agent, whose business it is 
to see that no natives are engaged without a deal of printed 
form, is told by his own man, in English, that the boys do 
not, and did not, wish to go as * labour,* and he refuses 
to give them up, in his own written words, because *he 
considered that it was greatly on the impulse of the moment 
that they stated their wish to return.* He undertook, if, on 
his return from the Torres Islands, they were in the same 
mind, to return them; but of course they never returned. 
Consider what an absolute farce this is : the man keeps boys 
who declare to his face that they have been deceived, and do 
not want to go, because in his own mind he feels sure that 
when they came on board they did wish to go. The boys 
are carried off because Mr. Pelham Obbard, the Govern- 
ment Agent, takes the evidence of his own judgment, 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 59 

that they came willingly on board to go to Queensland, 
when they declare they came on board to visit a country- 
man.*' 

But not only do the evils of slavery exist in Fiji, but the 
slave-trade also. 

The cost of passage-money between the Islands and Fiji 
generally ranges between twenty and forty shillings per 
head ; but the cost of delivering natives freight free in Fiji 
varies from £10 to 3^15, according to demand and supply. 
This latter is all called passage-money, though in reality it 
comprised the bribes given to the chiefs or connections of 
the victims and the costs of kidnapping. " On the amval 
of fresh Polynesians in Levuka, they are sold to the 
planters like any other article of commerce." 

Had the Government of the United States, instead of 
England, annexed the Fijis the laws of America would have 
effectually prevented the introduction of the contract system, 
with the frauds inseparable from it. Neither the South Sea 
slave-trade nor slavery in any form could then have found a 
place. No man would have been converted into property. 
The market price would have been paid for labour, and so 
soon as the islanders found that it was to their interest to 
take their labour to Fiji the supply would have been as 
abundant there as it is in America, and probably in every 
really free country in the world. 



60 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



CHAPTER VII. 

Slavery in Cuba — The Slave-Trade Treaties — ^Destruction of Life — 
Working of Slavery on the Estates — Captain Townshend's Visit — 
Fashionable Prejudice — Conduct of the Blacks: testimony of 
Governors of Jamaica — Leeward Islands. 

In the Spanish island of Cuba, as nearly as can be ascer- 
tained, there are 369,000 slaves at the present time. 

Between the years 1814 and 1845, five Treaties or Conven- 
tions for the suppression of the slave-trade were entered into 
between Great Britain and Spain. The second treaty was 
made in 1817, when Great Britain paid Spain ^400,000 for 
her absolute engagement to put an end to the slave-trade. 
At this date there were 199,145 slaves in Cuba. 

Subsequent to this the slave-trade was carried on in viola- 
tion of treaty obligations for a period of about fifty years. 

The traffic was contraband by Spanish law as well as under 
British treaty for which Spain had received her price. 

The exact number of slaves which have been thus surrep- 
titiously introduced into Cuba from Africa, in violation of the 
treaties, never can be known. Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, 
in 1838, computed it at 60,000 annually. Local witnesses 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 6l 

at that time placed it at 100,000 per annum. This does 
not include the number of those slaughtered in Africa, or 
those who perished in the middle passage. 

Looking carefully over all the information that has been 
published from time to time, a low estimate would show 
that a million and a quarter of slaves have been introduced 
since the earlier treaties were made. Supposing the last 
census to be correct, a million of men are missing — what has 
become of them? 

Perhaps an answer to this question may be found in the 
account given of a recent visit to Cuba, in an interesting 
volume just published by Captain Trench Townshend.* 

Being desirous to see slavery as it really exists. Captain 
Townshend obtained permission to visit a sugar plantation 
near Havana. 

"Outside the crushing-house fifty or sixty negro children, 
apparently from six to twelve years old, of both sexes, were 
occupied piling the canes on the elevator which conveyed them 
to the crushing-wheel, fresh loads being constantly brought in 
ox-waggons from the fields. Toiling away for their very lives in 
the broiling sunshine, the poor little wretches kept a constant eye 
on a formidable cow-hide whip, wielded by a negro who stood 
by ready to crack it across their bare backs if they attempted to 
idle, or eat the sugar-cane. 

* '* Wild Life in Florida, and a Visit to Cuba," by E. Trench 
Townshend, B.A. Hurst & Blackett. 1875. 



62 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

" From the mill we proceeded to the negro barracks, as their 
quarters are termed, consisting of brick buildings one story high, 
enclosing a large square, entered through double iron gates. As 
we passed in two ferocious-looking Cuban bloodhounds, chained 
one on either side of the gate, sniffed suspiciously near our legs, 
but, being trained to run down or attack negroes only, did 
not molest us. 

" On the ground-floor, opening on to the courtyard, were the 
negroes' rooms, secured by heavily-barred and padlocked doors. 
Opening one of these we found ourselves in one of the most 
horrible dens imaginable. Walls black with dirt, uneven clay 
floors about fourteen feet square, no means of admitting daylight 
or air except by the door ; a wooden table, bench and bedstead, 
the sole furniture. On the latter hung the remnants of a filthy 
blanket, while the worst filth covered the floor, furniture, and 
walls, which also were alive with vermin. In each of these 
pestiferous dungeons a whole family lived, in a condition more 
foul and degraded than any beasts of the field. We looked into 
several and found them alike, while from an open drain, a few 
feet from the doors, a most sickening stench proceeded. . . . 

" In quarters, the Chinese were considerably better off", occupy- 
ing separate huts at some distance from the negro barracks, and 
living entirely by themselves. Nominally not subject to the 
lash, in reality they experience the Bome treatment as the 
African, and are compelled to work the same time — eighteen 
hours a-day in the busy season — a fearful task in such a climate. 
- - . . By the Moret law, every child born in Cuba is free, 
and every n^gro Itecomes free on attaining the age of sixty. I 
asked how this law worked ? The answer wks, that the Moret 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 63 

law compels the children to work in return for their maintenance 
up to their eighteenth year. So, as yet, it has made no difference, 
while the few negroes who live to the age of sixty, are then unfit 
for work, and a good riddance to the planter. The average 
duration of life of an imported African is, I was told, little more 
than five years, if worked as a field-hand on a plantation. On 
some of the Cuban plantations the slaves live less miserably 
than on others, but on all they are compelled to work to a cruel 
extent. 

" Eighteen houps a-day for six days out of seven, under a 
Cuban sun, is horrible brutality, and soon wears out even the mag- 
nificently-powerful frame of the African, whose strength is kept 
constantly exerted to its very utmost efforts by the lash of the 
slave-driver. Sundays are kept on different days by different 
gangs; that is to say, one holiday is granted out of seven 
days to each gang in turn — a precaution taken lest all 
the slaves should combine together to escape, or murder their 
masters 

" What I saw of slavery on the Cuban plantations filled me 
with horror of the institution, and quite did away with my previous 
leaning towards it, even in the milder form. It is all very well 
to say that the slave is sleek and fat, well cared for, and happier 
in that condition than when free ; but those who say so, and I have 
often heard it said, should observe the cowed, dejected bearing 
of the slave, and the number of scarred, maimed, half-starved, 
and prematurely worn-out negroes seen even in the streets of 
Havana." 

Great credit is due to Captain Townshend for giving to the 



64 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

world what he saw of the working of slavery both Asiatic 
and African in Cuba, though it is to be regretted that he 
should endorse the fallacy about the negro so fashionable in 
certain circles. 

It might perhaps do no harm to some of our popular 
writers sometimes to recur to what the English people were 
some two thousand years ago, when they were in the habit 
of selling their wives and children as slaves. When Cicero 
described them as the ugliest and most stupid slaves 
that were brought to Rome. 

The allusion of Captain Townshend to Jamaica is unfor- 
tunate. The case of that Island fairly looked at will not 
sustain the views of those who cast indiscriminate reflections 
on the negroes. The despatches and addresses of Sir Lionel 
Smith and the Marquis of Sligo, successive Governors of 
Jamaica after emancipation took place, ought to have settled 
that question long ago. 

As to the commercial state of the Island, it may fairly be 
a matter of surprise that it has not been worse, considering 
that a very large number of the estates were deeply mort- 
gaged when emancipation took place ; that they were owned 
by absentees and managed by attorneys ; and, further, and 
beyond all, that the masters and managers (with some noble 
exceptions) were unwilling to conform their conduct to the 
new order of things when freedom came. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 65 

The report presented by Major Prendeville, the chief of 
the constabulary force in Jamaica to Sir Peter Grant, is in 
itself a testimony to the industry and good character of 
the negro population in Jamaica. The report is dated 
December, 1870, and is too long for insertion, but here is an 
extract from it : — 

" But in this country, with all its facilities for acquiring, on 
easy terms, the necessities for life, it cannot be said that idleness, 
and consequently vagrancy, prevails to any alarming extent. In 
the towns, especially in Kingston — ^the great centre of commerce 
and of population (34,314) — ^there are a goodly number of vagrants ; 
but it is not so in the rural districts. The Inspector for Clarendon 
(where there is a population of 42,747) reports * that it has not 
come to his notice that any class of persons in that parish are 
leading a notoriously idle and vagabond Hfe,' and that *the people 
are all employed either on the estates, or cultivating their own 
grounds, or chipping logwood.' The Inspector for St. Ann's 
(population 39,547) says that * the people, as a rule, work very 
well, and are industrious.' The Inspector for Trelawncy. (popu- 
lation 28,812) expresses pleasure in stating that the peasantry in 
his district * appear to be industriously disposed.' The Inspector 
for St. Mary's (population 36,495:) assures me 'that the labouring 
classes are, on the whole, industrious, cheerful, artd contented.' 
The Inspector for St. Andrew's writes * that the labouring popu- 
lation of the several districts in his parish are industrious and 
thriving.' The late Inspector of Westmoreland (population 
40,823) also bore testimony as to the peasantry of that parish 

F 



66 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

being in comfortable circumstances, owning lands, and being 
industrious." 

Turning to the Leeward Islands, we find the following 
character of the negro by Sir B. C. C. Pine : — 

** As this appeal is made chiefly in behalf of the Negro and 
coloured race, it may not, sir, be out of place for me to make a 
few remarks upon that race, more especially as I have seen with 
regret that their character has of late been misrepresented in 
England. In giving you my humble opinion of this people, I am 
also giving that of the Bishop. His Lordship is himself a "West 
Indian. I have been for ten years Lieutenant-Governor and 
Governor in the West Indies, after having previously lived among 
the race in Africa. If, therefore, our opinion of the race is 
erroneous, it is for want of judgment that we err, not for want of 
experience. We are both of one mind regarding the race as we 
have seen them. We are not their blind advocates ; we are fully 
sensible of their faults ; some of these faults being seemingly 
inherent in their race ; but far more being the bitter results of 
that accursed institution from which they have been liberated 
hardly more than a quarter of a century. With all these faults 
we have recognised in the race qualities entitling them to the 
love of their fellow-men. They have a singular respect for 
justice ; deal justly with a negro and no severity will be mur- 
mured at. They have an intense respect for authority if exercised 
even with moderate fairness, and they are, on the whole, the 
most easily governed people that I have ever met with. Their 
kindness of heart and their good humour even their enemies will 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 67 

admit. They are accused of being idle, but it is only wonderful 
to me, considering the evil effects of slavery, and especially the 
stigma that it has cast on honest labour, that they are as indus- 
trious as they are." 

Whilst referring to this subject it seems impossible to 
resist the temptation to quote the following passage from the 
second volume of the Last Journals of Dr. Livingstone : — 

" The emancipation of our West India slaves was the work 
of but a small number of the people of England, the philan- 
thropists and all the more advanced thinkers of the age. Nu- 
merically they were a very small minority of the population, and 
powerful only from the superior abilities of the leading men, and 
from having the right, the true, and just, on their side. Of the 
rest of the population an immense number were the indifferent, 
who had no sympathies to spare for any beyond their own fire- 
side circles.' 

** In the course of time sensation writers came up on the 
surface of society, and, by way of originality, they condemned 
almost every measure and person of the past. 

** * Emancipation was a mistake.' And these fast writers drew 
along with them a large body who would fain be slave-holders 
themselves. We must never lose sight of the fact that though 
the majority, perhaps, are on the side of freedom, large numbers 
of Englishmen are not slave-holders only because the law forbids 
the practice. In this proclivity we see a great part of the reason 
of the frantic sympathy of the thousands with the rebels in the 
great Black War in America. The would-be slave-holders 

F 2 



68 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

showed their leanings unmistakably, in reference to the Jamaica 
outbreak, and many a would-be Colonel Hobbs, in lack of 
revolvers, dipped his pen in gall, and railed against all niggers 
who could not be made slaves. We wonder what they thought 
of their hero, when informed that for very shame at what he had 
done and written, he had rushed unbidden out of the world ! " 

As to the Southern States of America it seems strange that 
Captain Townshend should not be aware that the produce of 
those States now is often equal, sometimes greater, than it 
was in the days of slavery.* To the honour of the masses in 
the manufacturing districts in Lancashire, it should be 
remembered that, when they were famine-stricken, owing to 
the want of cotton caused by the American Civil War, all 

* On craint que resclave ne veuillc plus travailler, et cette inqui(5tude 
est asscz naturelle, puisqu'on a tout fait pour lui rendrc le travail 
odieux. Cependant rexemple des colonies anglaises, fran^aises, hollan- 
daises, prouve la parfaite vdrit^ de ce mot du Marquis de Sligo, gouver- 
neur de la Jamai'que au moment de Temancipation, en 1838: ^' touted 
les fois que les proprietaires veulent que la chose aille bieriy elk va bienr 
L'exemple des Etats-Unis du sud, o^ d6ja, le travail libre arrive presque 
a fournir autant de coton que le travail servile en produisait avant la 
guerre, est -plus significatif encore. Une meilleure distribution du 
travail, Tintroduction des machines, la concentration des usines, une 
surveillance plus exacte, surtout un travail plus intelligent et plus 
<$ncrgique, parce qu'il est stimuli par Tint^ret personnel, permettent 
de tirer de cent hommes libres des resultats bien superieurs a ceux 
que produisent deux cents esclaves. — V Espagne et PEscIac/age, M, Cochin^ 
Membre de t Institute 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 69 

attempts to induce them to support the Southern sympa- 
thisers were unsuccessful. They attended meetings called 
by the pro-slavery party in great numbers, and quietly 
outvoted them. 

One thing is perfectly clear — there is a duty for Eng- 
land to perform on behalf of the remnant of slaves now 
living in Cuba. Lord Palmerston repeatedly asserted the 
right of Great Britain to claim the liberation of all the slaves 
introduced into Cuba in violation of the treaties. 

Since his time all our Foreign- Secretaries, including the 
present Earl of Derby, to whom thanks are due for his 
enlightened interest in the cause, have held that Great 
Britain has this right. 

Lord Palmerston, in his evidence before a Committee of 
the House of Commons, said, " I believe there was a fixed 
sum paid to the Government of Cuba for each negro im- 
ported; and that, besides that, bribes were given to the 
whole of the officers of customs and police, in order to 
induce them to wink at what was doing. The illegality 
stands on more than one ground. There is a treaty which 
binds the Spanish Crown to prevent the importation of 
negroes; and there is a law of Ferdinand VIL, by which 
it is illegal to import slaves into any Spanish colony, and by 
which, moreover, any slave imported in violation of that 
law is, ipso facto, entitled to his freedom;" 



70 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



CHAPTER VIII. 

Civil War in Cuba — The Spanish Government of the Island — ^The: 
two great parties— The Revolution in Spain, 1868 — Special Laws- 
— Abolition of Slavery in Porto Rico — Course of the late British 
Cabinet. 

Spain has always ruled Cuba on principles similar to* 
those by which she governed, and through which she lost 
all her extensive possessions in South America — not for 
the good of the colonists, but for the profit of the Government 
of Spain, its retainers and dependents. Perhaps no better 
representation could be given of the relations between Spain 
and Cuba than the substance of some ironical sentences, 
from Franklin, quoted by M. Laboulaye, in his able preface- 
to Valiente's work on Cuba : — 

** If you desire that a separation may be always possible,, 
govern your colonies by laws of your own making ; interfere with 
their commerce ; tax them at your pleasure for your own profit ;, 
use their revenues which cost you nothing ; give despotic power- 
to the general who rules in your name, and make him free from 
Colonial control. If the colonies complain, don't listen to them ; 
accuse them of high treason and rebellion; say that all their 
complaints are the inventions of demagogues ; and if they can be. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 71 

caught all will go well. Hang some of them — the blood of the 
martyrs works miracles. Follow this course, and you will 
infallibly arrive at the consummation of your desires — you will 
be delivered from your colonies." 

The Government of Cuba, what is it? 

The powers of the Captain-General are unlimited, and at 
all times equal to those of a General in a time of siege.* 

There are two great parties in Cuba — the Spanish party is 
mainly composed of the old slave traders, some of them 
large proprietors of both estates and slaves, together with a 
host of placemen from Spain of every conceivable kind, from 
the Captain-General downwards. 

The Cuban party is mainly composed of free Creoles, 
many of whom have been large owners of slaves and estates, 
and very wealthy. 

• Les pouvoirs des capitaines-g^n6raux y sont definis en termes 
auxquels on nc rcprocliera pas dc manquer de clart6. " Le roi notre 
seigneur, y est-il dit, afin de conservcr dans la pr6cieuse ile de Cuba sa 
legitime et souveraine autorit6 et la tranquillit6 publique, vous accorde 
toute la plenitude des pouvoirs que les lois militaires conferent aux gouverneurs 
des places assiegees. Par consequent, sa majest6 le roi vous accorde I'autori- 
sation la plus (Stendue et la plus illimit6e, non-seulement pour exiler de. 
Tile toute personne, quels que soient son rang, sa classe ou sa condition 

dont la presence pourrait vous inspirer des soucis maisaussi pour 

suspendre Texecution des ordres et ordonnances expedies sur les diverscs 
branches de Fadministration publique." — M, Cochin, 



72 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

It has long been the custom of the latter class to send their 
sons to be educated in Paris, London, and New York, where 
they have become acquainted with their rights as men, and 
have imbibed desires for the liberty in their own country 
which they have witnessed abroad. 

This numerous and wealthy party had winced under the 
galling yoke of Spain long before the revolution broke out in 
1868. Upon that occasion the Provisional Government in 
Madrid declared that a general reform should take place, and 
that the colonists should enjoy the same privileges as the 
inhabitants of Spain. In a very short time, however, the 
telegraph informed them that instead of this equality of 
rights, special laws were to be adopted for the colonies. The 
Cuban Liberals became alarmed. They knew what special 
legislation meant, for the same thing had been promised to 
them in 1837 ^md 1845. In unsheathing the sword they 
made a great mistake; their defence is, "If ever people 
were justified in appealing to arms we were." Who, 
except those who believe all war to be wrong, shall answer 
the plea ? 

But whatever were the causes in which the war originated, 
the struggle is now one between freedom and slavery. Very 
soon after the commencement of hostilities, the Cuban party 
set all their slaves at liberty — a course not surprising when 
it is borne in mind that, so far back as the year 1840, a strong 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 73 

desire existed in many of the free Cubans to see an end put 
to slavery and the slave-trade. 

Mr. TumbuU, the British Commissioner in Cuba at 
that time, bore strong testimony on this subject, and stated 
that whilst the Spanish were determined at all hazards to 
continue the slave-trade, the native Cubans were strongly 
against it. It was this strong desire among the Cubans 
to see slavery abolished that drew from M. Olozaga, in 
Paris, in 1867, the statement that ** in every country that 
had declared emancipation, the movement came from 
without, and that abolition was forced upon the planters. 
To-day the colonies and the people of Spain desired 
emancipation, but the central Government was opposed 
to it." 

The war has already existed six years, during which long 
period countless atrocities have been committed on both 
sides. It can scarcely be doubted but that more than a 
hundred thousand lives have already been sacrificed. 

The conclusion of the war, and the abolition of slavery, 
will doubtless take place at the same time. In Madrid this 
opinion increasingly prevails. A considerable number of 
eminent men, of various parties, have declared that to bring 
the war to an end slavery must necessarily be abolished. 

When Senor Olozaga stated in Paris that the people of 
Spain were opposed to the longer existence of negro slavery, 



74 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

neither the press nor the Spanish people could speak ; but 
immediately after the Revolution in 1868, public meetings, 
calling for the entire abolition of slavery, were held in 
Madrid, and in all the large and many of the smaller towns 
in Spain. 

Knowing that a large and opulent party in Cuba, and that 
the whole people of Spain, were anxious for the abolition of 
slavery, it could scarcely be unreasonable to expect that the 
late British Cabinet would have availed themselves of the 
circumstances, and have manifested more interest in the 
great movement for its realisation. 

But looking at all that has taken place since the lamented 
death of Earl Clarendon, little satisfaction can be taken in 
this direction. The French Government has done some- 
thing in aid of the cause ; the ■ American Government has 
done much more, and has rendered to it the most important 
service. 

It might surely have been expected that the English 
Government would have shown the deepest interest in the 
movement, — insomuch as she has in her treaties bases for 
action not possessed by any other Power. The slaves, by 
virtue of the treaties, are, in a certain sense, her wards, and 
the honour of the British nation is involved in their lot. 

Since the revolution in Spain in 1868, several occasions 
have presented, when Great Britain might have been of 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 75 

essential service to humanity. One of these occasions is of 
a character too striking to be overlooked. When — on the 
resignation of King Amadeus — the Republicans came into 
power, they declared their intention to abolish slavery both in 
Porto Rico and Cuba. The policy of the Republic, as declared 
by Senor Castelar, was as follows : — 

** First — The immediate abolition of slavery. 

" Secondly — ^Antonomy of the Islands of Porto Rico and 
Cuba, which shall have a parliamentary assembly of their 
own, their own administration, their own government, and 
a federal tie to unite them with Spain, as Canada is united 
with England, in order that we may found the liberty of 
those States, and at the same time conserve the national 
integrity. I desire that the islands of Cuba and Porto Rico 
shall be our sisters, and I do not desire that they shall be 
transatlantic Polands." 

This declaration was received with satisfaction in America, 
and Mr. Fish, the Foreign Secretary, assured the Spanish 
Government that it would have " the hearty co-operation and 
support of the Government of the United States." 

Bills for the abolition of slavery were prepared ; that for 
Porto Rico was carried through the Cortes, and passed into 
law ; but the opposition became so powerful, that the idea of 
carrying the bill for the abolition of slavery in Cuba had to 
be deferred. 



76 ^ THE LOST CONTINENT. 

This would probably not have been the case had the 
Government of Castelar been acknowledged by the British 
Cabinet. Up to this time the Times stated that the young 
Republic had made no mistake. 

But, although it was bent on the abolition of slavery and 
the extinction of a war,. the British Cabinet could not see its 
way to acknowlecjge it. 

Even the measure for Porto Rico could not have been 
carried but for the support of the American Government and 
its indefatigable representive in Madrid, General Sickles. 
The abolitionists in Madrid state that, during all this time, 
the cause received no aid or sympathy from the British 
Government or its Ambassador. 

Seeing that the people of Spain are so unanimously in 
favour of abolition, it may seem extraordinary that any 
powerful opposition [should be possible; but there are very 
opulent men in Spain whose fortunes have been made in the 
slave-trade, and others who represent the Spanish party in 
Cuba. These form a Junta, which has its head-quarters in 
Madrid, and is supplied with enormous resources, which are 
freely used in corrupting placemen and the press. It is well 
known that on one occasion it received the large amount of 
:f35>ooo in a single remittance. 

Its resources far exceed those of the West India Com- 
mittee in the days of British slavery, and are used in a much 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 77 

more unscrupulous manner. It is well known that Senor 
Castelar and his colleagues took the reins of Government 
without shedding blood, and with the unanimous vote of the 
Cortes ; that they were bent upon bringing the war in Cuba 
to an end by the abolition of slavery. 

It has been remarked that when the late Emperor of 
France extinguished a Legislative Assembly by violence, 
and stepped to the throne in blood, the British minister of 
the day gave the most prompt and unhesitating support — it 
is said, before the colour of the blood was out of the gutters 
of the Boulevards. But the late British Cabinet could not see 
its way to acknowledge the Government of Castelar, though 
that Government promised both the abolition of slavery and 
the extinction of a war. The course pursued by England in 
this affair, after a careful survey of all that her diplomatists 
have advanced in defence of it, leaves the painful impression 
that, to a preference for one form of government over another, 
the interests of humanity have been sacrificed. 

It is not encouraging to observe that the Government 
of the young King, Alfonso XII., has appointed General 
Valmuseda Governor of Cuba, seeing that, when he was 
Captain-General of the Island a few years ago, he issued 
an edict which ought not to have been forgotten. A 
large number of time-expired coolies were waiting in 
Havannah for a vessel to take them to China, when 400 



78 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

were seized by his Government and sold to planters for eight 
years more. It was in reference to this act that the United 
States Secretary, Hamilton Fish, thus alluded, in a despatch 
to General Sickles — "If it be true (and it is true), it is 
impossible for the Governments of any civilised countries to 
be indifferent to so atrocious a proceeding." 

Is not the time come when the British Government can 
no longer, consistently with her honour, remain indifferent 
to the state of Cuba? In moral efforts for the sake of 
our common humanity she would have the friendly aid, 
not only of the United States, France, Germany, and 
Spain, but the sympathy and approval of the whole civi- 
lized world. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 79 



CHAPTER IX. 

The Zanzibar Treaty — Legal difficulties as to its provisions — New 
Routes by Land for the Slave-trade — Condition of the African 
People where not demoralised by the Slave-trader. 

One- important result of the Treaty so ably negociated by 
Sir Bartle Frere with the Sultan of Zanzibar, was that 
England got rid of the former treaties, which, whatever 
might be the intention of the contracting parties, committed 
♦Great Britain to a compromise with slave-trading for which 
.she has been justly censured by many enlightened men. 

Since the ratification of the new treaty, the Sultan has 
done honour to himself by his exertions faithfully to carry 
out its various stipulations. 

Unhappily there has arisen a very serious complica- 
tion about this treaty, for which we do not hear that the 
Sultan of Zanzibar is in any way to blame. There has 
:sprung up a conflict of opinion among the English Crown 
lawyers; some of them hold that only such dhows as have 
.slaves on board for sale can be seized by Her Majesty's 
cruizers. The commander of a dhow laden with slaves has 
nothing to do but to assert that the slaves are not for sale, 



80 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

and he must be allowed to pass with his cargo of slaves 
without molestation. 

The commanders of the cruizers are powerless in such 
cases, as the anus probandi lies with them. This is so grave 
a point that no delay ought to take place in eifectually 
clearing up the matter. Our consular agents and officers, 
and all who have the serious responsibility of carrying the 
provisions of the treaty into execution, ought not to be left 
in any difficulty as to the law of the case. 

But the treaty does not reach the land-traffic, which has 
now been substituted for the sea route. In illustration of 
this, it is found that regular land routes have been organised 
along which thousands of slaves are sent northward to be 
shipped at Pemba or Lamoo, for the Egyptian, Turkish, 
and Persian markets. 

According to Vice-Consul Elton, 4,096 slaves passed 
between Dar-es-Salam and Kilwa Kivinga in the course of 
about one month. 

Again Captain Elton writes, in January, 1874 : — 

"Whilst lying ill under a shed at Kikunia, on the 30th, a 
caravan of 400 slaves passed through the village ; and on the 
next day a far larger one (we counted 1,000 and then stopped) 
of some 1,100 filed past within sight of my bed, in long chain 
gangs, heavily laden with provisions for the road. The leader of 
the latter, one Mamji Hadji, conceived it his duty to call on me. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 8 1 

accompanied by about eight of his men armed with muskets. He 
was very communicative, said * he had been away two years ; did 
not know exactly how many slaves he had, more than i,ooo 
certainly; was obliged to march slowly, as some had been a 
year and a-half in the gangs, had taken seven days from Kilwa ; 
thought it a good thing the sea route was closed^ as he saved 
duty, and the land journey was cheaper.' '* 

The continuance of the slave-trade is also alluded to by 
Colonel Cameron, in a letter from another district. Kawele 
Ujiji, May 1874, he says : — 

" Now for a little slaving news. It is still in force, as you 
will see by my journal ; but, perhaps, I may here give you a little 
intelligence that may be novel and startling. Some of the white 
merchants, according to my Arab informant, buy slaves. (He 
did not see any English, but he heard of English and English 
men-of-war). There are Spanish and Portuguese houses on the 
Congo, and they no doubt do a little slaving business still. This 
ought to be looked to." 

Among the many impediments to the abolition of the 
slave-trade, and to united efforts on behalf of Africa, must be 
ranked the mistaken impression of many people, that the 
African race is so naturally bad that it cannot be improved 
and elevated. This error must mainly be attributed to the 
demoralizing effects of the slave-trade, which has formed an 
evil ring around that great continent from which has spread 



82 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



inwards all the vices of humanity in * its most debased 
condition. 

In the few parts of Africa where the slave-trade has not 
yet reached, tribes are to be found living in order and happi- 
ness — cultivating their lands, and peacefully enjoying every- 
thing their physical wants require, of which abundant 
evidence has been brought to light, from the days of Mungo 
Park to the present time. To this Dr. Livingstone occa- 
sionally bears ample testimony. 

The Negro where the Slave-trade has never been. 

** Fortunately I was in a country nowj after leaving the shores 
of the Nassau, where the feet of the slave-trader had not trod. 
It was a new and virgin land ; and of course, as I have always 
found it, in such cases the natives were really good and hospi- 
table, and for very small portions of cloth my baggage was 
conveyed from village to village by them. 

** In many other ways the traveller, in his extremity, was 
kindly treated by the undefiled and unspoilt natives. 

** When Syde and Dugumbe come, I hope to get men and a 
canoe to finish my work among those who have not been abused 
by Ujijians, and still retain their natural kindness of disposition; 
none of the people are ferocious without cause. .... The 
education of the world is a terrible one, and it has come down 
with relentless rigour on Africa from the most remote times ! 
What the African will become after this awfully hard lesson is 
learned, is among the future developments of Providence. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 83 



When He, who is higher than the highest, accomplishes His 
purposes, this will be a wonderful country, and again something 
like what it was of old, when Terah and Tirhaka flourished and 
were great, 

*' Nsama*s people are particularly handsome. Many of the 
men have as beautiful heads as one could find in an assembly of 
Europeans. All have very fine forms, with small hands and 
feet. None of the West Coast ugliness, from which most of our 
ideas of the negroes are derived, is here to be seen. No prog- 
nathous jaws nor lark heels offended the sight. My observation 
deepened the impression, first obtained from the remarks of 
Winwood Reade, that the typical negro is seen in the ancient 
Egyptian, and not in the ungainly forms which grow up in the 
unhealthy swamps of the West Coast. Indeed, it is probable 
that this upland forest region is the true home of the negro. The 
women excited the admiration of the Arabs. They have fine, 
small, well-formed features." 

** The whole of my experience in Central Africa says that the 
negroes not yet spoilt by contact with the slave-trade are distin- 
guished for friendliness and good sense. In one point they are 
remarkable — ^they are honest." 

In one of his letters Dr. Livingstone says : — 

** I was so frequently asked, when in England, < Would these 
Africans work for one ?* * Yes, if you could pay . them.* This 
answer produced such a palpable lengthening of visage, that I 
suspected my questioner had been speculating on getting them 
to work for nothing; in fact, to be slave owners." 

Colonel Cameron, in a published letter, has also given his 

G 2 



A 



84 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

experience of the African natives who have not been made 
slaves, in the following words : — 

" I have lost,'* says he, " all idea of colour being a sign of 
inferiority. Many of the people I have seen and talked to are very 
intelligent, and fully recognise the value of having more trade, and 
the tales of the lack of industry and want of purpose, are only true 
of slaves, and the degraded predatory tribes. To see the 
enormous fields which are cultivated entirely with the hoe, and to 
say that these people lack purpose, is impossible. Those who 
say that all the people here are drunkards, utter a scandal. The 
means of getting drunk here are plenty enough ; but the only 
people I see drunk here are my own pagazi and askari, and the 
slaves and servants of the Arabs, with very few exceptions. Not 
near so many people are drunkards here as in England, in pro- 
portion to the numbers. Of course, living as they do without 
any religion or hopes of a future life, with few wants and no 
resources, they are low in the scale of civilization, but they are 
not rude or brawling to strangers. I have never had the slightest 
incivility offered to me. I take my stand always as being to the 
full as big a man as any chief I meet, but am always careful to 
be most punctiliously civil to them. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 85 



CHAPTER X. 

Dr. Livingstone's last Journals — Christian regard for Human Life 
—Slave-trade as seen in his latter years. 

It is a touching thing to see the last journals of a man 
who has held a large place in the minds of his fellow-coun- 
trymen, and in the estimation of the world, through a long 
course of years — especially is it so with respect to one who 
has passed from the world under such peculiar circum- 
stances. 

Dr. Livingstone has laid open to the light some of the 
darkest portions of the world; and before this light the 
habitations of cruelty will not be allowed much longer to 
remain. He has not been permitted to see the fruit of his 
labours ; but his labours will remain. 

His track in Africa is not traced in blood, but in a light 
that will never be obliterated. In his practice he held 
human life to be sacred. Carrying with him wherever he 
went the influence of true goodness, he gained over the 
savage, made even more savage by the slave-trade. 

The white man who follows him is safe ; though the life of the 
white man who follows the Queensland labour trafficker is 



86 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

in constant jeopardy. Dr. Livingstone never pointed a weapon 
against his fellow-man, and even records a sense of humilia- 
tion after using a stick to correct a servant. His sufferings, 
self-sacrifice, and life-long devotion to the cause of the 
oppressed, has left a legacy to the world — the duty to bring 
slavery and the slave-trade to an end in the shortest prac- 
ticable time. 

It was no light task to undertake the editorship of the 
last journals of such a man, written as they were under such 
peculiar circumstances. It is well that the work was under- 
taken by his friend and colleague, the "Rev." Horace Waller, 
to whom the thanks of the public are due for the form in which 
the volumes have been presented. The short and judicious 
notes show how careful the editor has been to keep himself 
in the background, in order the more effectually to present 
Dr. Livingstone to the public. 

The following extracts, taken promiscuously, will show a 
little of what Dr. Livingstone met with in his latter years in 
reference to 

THE SLAVE-TRADE. 

" When endeavouring to give some account of the slave-trade 
of East Africa, it was necessary to keep far within the truth, in 
order not to be thought guilty of exaggeration ; but, in sober 
seriousness, the subject does not admit of exaggeration. To 
overdraw its evils is a simple impossibility. The sights I have 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 87 

seem, though common incidents of the traffic, are so nauseous 
that I always try to drive them from memory. In the case of 
most disagreeable recollections I can succeed, in time, in con- 
signing them to oblivion ; but the slaving scenes 'come back 
unbidden, and make me start up at dead of night horrified by 
their vividness." 

" No words can convey an adequate idea of the scene o 
wide-spread desolation which the once pleasant Shire Valley 
now presented. Instead of smiling villages and crowds of 
people coming with things for sale, scarcely a soul was to be 

seen Large masses of the people had fled down to 

the Shire, only anxious to get the river between them and their 
enemies. Most of the food had been left behind, and famine 
and starvation had cut off so many that the remainder were too 
few to bury the dead. The corpses we saw floating down the 
river were only a remnant of those that had perished, whom 
their friends, from weakness, could not bury, nor over-gorged 
crocodiles devour 

"We were informed by Mr. Waller of the dreadful blight 
which had befallen the once smiling Shire Valley. His words, 
though strong, failed to impress us with the reality. In fact, 
they were received, as some may accept our own, as tinged 
with exaggeration; but when our eyes beheld the last mere 
driblets of this cup of woe, we for the first time felt that the 
enormous wrongs inflicted on our fellow-men by slaving are 

beyond exaggeration The sight of this desert, but 

eighteen months ago a well-peopled valley, now literally strewn 
with human bones, forced the conviction upon us, that the 
destruction of human life in the middle passage, however great. 



88 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

constitutes but a small portion of the waste, and made us feel 
that unless the slave-trade — that monster iniquity, which has so 
long brooded over Africa — is put down, lawful commerce cannot 
be established. 

" We passed a woman tied by the neck to a tree and dead. 
The people of the country explained that she had been unable 
to keep up with the other slaves in a gang, and her master had 
determined that she should not become the property of anyone 
else if she recovered after resting for a time. I may mention- 
here that we saw others tied . up in a similar manner, and one 
lying in the path shot or stabbed, for she was in a pool of blood. 
The explanation we got invariably was that the Arab who 
owned these victims was enraged at losing his money by the 
slaves becoming unable to march, and vented his spleen by 
murdering them. 

" To-day we came upon a man dead from starvation, as he 
was very thin. One of our men wandered and found a number 
of slaves with slave-sticks on, abandoned by their master from 
want of food ; they were too weak to be able to speak or say 
where they had come from — some were quite young. ... 

" I saw another person bound to a tree and dead — a sad sight 
to see, whoever was the perpetrator. So many slave-sticks lie 
along our path, that I suspect the people hereabout make a 
practice of liberating what slaves they can find abandoned on 
the march to sell them again." 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 89 



CHAPTER XL 

Remarks on Christian Missions — Dr. Livingstone — Colonel Cameron — 
New and extensive steam communication with Zanzibar, ports 
in Eastern Africa — Projected Ship Canal, North Western Africa. 

Nothing can be more necessary to Africa than Christian 
Missions. Whether those which have been established 
during the past thirty years have been conducted on the 
soundest principles it is not necessary here to inquire. The 
great purpose of Christianity is not only to prepare man for a 
future state but to elevate and bless him in the present life. 

Those missions which have not been paralysed or laid 
waste by slavery have effected in particular localities a very 
large amount of good. But many noble efforts in various 
parts of Africa, which promised well for a time, have been 
destroyed by the slave-trade. They have not failed for want 
of support from England and the various other countries 
from which they have emanated, neither have they failed from 
defects of character in the missionaries, the energy, devoted- 
ness, and self-sacrifice of whom is beyond all praise. But it is 
certain that where these missions have wasted away, languished 
and died, it has been in consequence of the slave-trade. 



go THE LOST CONTINENT. 



There is at the present moment a great amount of Christian 
zeal turned in the direction of Africa. Large amounts of 
money have been freely offered for the establishment of new 
Missions. All this is very encouraging, but it is impossible 
not to feel some apprehension that, unless slavery is abolished 
in the East, the slave-trade may now, as formerly, lay waste 
the projected missions, and disappoint the expectations of 
their promoters. The following remarks on the subject of 
missions, by Dr. Livingstone and Colonel Cameron, are worthy 
of note. 

Dr. Livingstone on MissioNS in the Interior. 

" I would say to missionaries, * Come on, brethren, to the 
real heathen. You have no idea how brave you are till you 
try.* Leaving the coast tribes, and devoting yourselves 
heartily to the savages, as they are called, you will find, with 
some drawbacks and wickedness, a very great deal to admire 
and love. Many statements made about them require confir- 
mation. You will never see women selling their infants, the 
Arabs never did, nor have L An assertion of the kind was 
made by mistake.'* 

" Goodness or unselfishness impresses their minds more 
than any kind of skill or power. They say, ' You have dif- 
ferent hearts from ours ; all black men's hearts are bad, but 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. QI 

yours are good.' The prayer to Jesus for a new heart and 
right spirit at once commends itself as appropriate." 

" But no one expects any benevolent efforts from those who 
cavil and carp at efforts made by Governments and peoples to 
heal the enormous open sore of the world. Some profess 
that they would rather give * their mite' for the degraded of 
our own countrymen than to ' niggers !' Verily it is * a 
mite,' and they most often forget, and make a gift of it to 
themselves. It is almost an axiom that those who do most 
for the heathen abroad are most liberal for the heathen at 
home. It is to this class we turn with hope." 

Colonel Cameron on Missions. 

" If missions are to be established they should be in- 
dustrial ones ; all the clergy should be thorough gentlemen, 
but there should be subordinates who could instruct the 
natives — smiths, carpenters, agriculturists, &c. The utmost 
care and discrimination should be exercised in selecting these. 
It is no use only teaching the natives to read and write ; they 
don't teach or raise others, and are in a measure unfitted for 
a return to their own homes. If they knew trades they 
would teach them to others, and having the means of obtain- 
ing a livelihood and living in superior comfort to their neigh- 
bours, would tend to raise the latter, and become each in his 



92 THE LOST CONTINENT, 

own home a centre of dawning Christianity and civilisation. 
This is where our Zanzibar mission errs : the boys are taught 
to read and write and made gentlemen of; when they leave 
the mission, at the age of twenty or thereabouts, they have 
no means of obtaining a livelihood, and fall into the hands 
of the Arabs, and soon forget their Christianity and become 
nominally Mohammedans, virtually nothing. The French 
mission at Bagamoyo is a good commencement in this way, 
but might be improved upon. I do not mean that the boys 
should not be taught to read and write ; but do this, and not 
leave the other undone." 

Although the importance of Christian Missions for Africa 
cannot be over-rated, there are other agencies at work which, 
if slavery be abolished, must prove of immense benefit both 
to Africa and Europe. 

Through the enterprise and liberality of che British Steam 
Navigation Company and their public-spirited Chairman, Mr. 
Mackinnon, aided by a very moderate subsidy from the 
Governments of England, France and Portugal, frequent 
steam communication is now established with Zanzibar, the 
various ports and places on the East Coast of Africa, Mada- 
gascar, and the several other islands in those seas. This 
wise and beneficial scheme has been mainly brought about 
by the indefatigable exertions of James Long, Esq. 

This gentleman has also rendered essential service by 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 



93 



bringing the whole subject of our commercial arrangements 
with Eastern Africa before neariy all the Chambers of Com- 
merce in the large towns in England. 

We must not, however, overlook the fact that the slave- 
trade is so enormously profitable that it destroys lawful com- 
merce, and that increased facilities for communication may 
be turned to account by the slave-traders. 

In past times it has on several occasions happened that 
the best meant schemes have done more for the encourage- 
ment of the slave-trade than they have done for lawful com- 
merce. We must not shut our eyes to the extreme probability 
that the same result will attend these new efforts if slavery 
be not abolished. Even the steamers which ply in the 
Mediterranean and the Red Sea frequently carry slaves, and 
in other ways are made to foster the slave-trade. 

Steam and commerce, however, are invaluable as auxi- 
liaries, but they are not the remedy for the slave-trade, and, 
alone they never will abolish it. 

The African Institution tried to effect the great object by 
the promotion of commerce forty years ago; — the Great 
Civilisation Society of 1840, supported by the most eminent 
men in the country, with a princely revenue and the aid of 
steam, altogether failed in its spirited and well-meant efforts. 
Since that time several other considerable efforts have been 
made which have only been attended with similar results. 



94 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

An interesting scheme has recently been broached, which, 
if found practicable and carried out, must prove of immense 
benefit to the central portions of Northern Africa. The great 
desert of Sahara is one vast depression, upwards of 600 miles 
in length, and from the statements of Dr. Barth, and other 
eminent travellers, it is supposed to be about 140 feet below 
the level of the Atlantic. 

To submerge this, and open water communication with the 
fertile lands, and abundant population of the interior, it is 
said to be only necessary to cut through a narrow tract of 
land. Some information on this project will be found in the 
Appendix (D). 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 95 



S^ 



CHAPTER XII. 

Introduction of British Indian Coolies into Surinam. The Dutch in 
Java — Dutch war of aggression in Achecn. 

It had in latter times been the settled practice of the 
English Government not to allow any further extension of 
the system of Coolie immigration from British India into 
the possessions of Foreign Powers, especially so with regard 
to places where slavery has existed. 

But this excellent policy has been departed from by the late 
Government, which has licensed the traffic to Surinam. The 
reasons for this change have not been made public, but it is 
supposed to have been done at the instance of those British 
slave-owners in Dutch Guiana who, in 1852, memorialised 
the Netherlands Government against the project of abolishing 
slavery. It was proposed by the Dutch Government, about 
that time, to make all children born after the passing of the 
Act free. But the memorialists, among whom were an 
English Baronet and two ladies, claimed compensation, not 
merely for slaves then living, but also for the yet unborn 
children of slave-mothers. On this occasion the Earl of 



96 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

Malmesbury addressed the following words to the British 
Ambassador at the Hague : — 

" You will say, first, that Her Majesty's Government have 
no sympathy with British subjects who own slaves in foreign 
countries; and, secondly, that they think the emancipation of 
slaves is of much more importance to the welfare of the 
human race than the interests of any British subjects who 
may consider they are entitled to compensation for losses 
sustained in consequence of the emancipation of slaves in 
foreign countries/'* 

A Consul has been appointed who is supposed to protect 
these British Indian Coolies, but anything approaching to 
effectual protection in Surinam, where the estates are widely 
separated, both on the mainland and adjacent islands, is a 
simple impossibility. 

The Dutch in Java. 

This departure of the late Cabinet from a settled National 
Policy is the more extraordinary in view of the fact that the 
oppressive rule of the Dutch over the labouring class in her 
dependencies had been recently exposed in several public 
journals. Their grinding oppressions in Java had been made 
the subject of very severe but just comment. 

* By the 6 & 7 Victoria, slave -holding by British subjects in foreign 
countries is made a penal offence. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 97 

Under a species of serfdom called **heerendienst" the 
natives of Java are made to bear the expense of a standing 
army of about 40,000 men, and all Colonial expenses, and to 
yield to Holland a clear profit of more than two millions 
sterling annually. 

It is well known that, in addition to the greater part of 
Sumatra, the Moluccas, and other islands, and a vast slice of 
Borneo, Holland virtually possesses the whole of the large 
island of Java, which, though a Christian Government, she , 
has rendered a scandal to the civilised world. 

The traveller in Holland admires the beautiful villas, bright 
gardens, and surrounding avenues of the '* Java quarter" at 
The Hague, but witnesses in that fair sight nothing of the 
misery and debasement in far-off lands which have been 
made mainly to contribute to that splendour. For into the 
Dutch coffers the rich tribute of ^^3,000,000 flows annually 
from Java, being so much clear profit over and above all 
the cost of maintaining the Colonial Government and arma- 
ments. 

Further confirmation of the statements made in the Morn- 
ing Post and other papers is abundantly afforded in a recent 
work which devotes several chapters to Java, viz.: — **A 
Voyage Round the World," by the Marquis de Beauvoir 
(London : Murray, 1870). After describing his tour through 
the island, and the courtesy with which he was treated by the 

H 



gS THE LOST CONTINENT. 

authorities, he remarks — " It went to my heart never to see 
a man stand up before me, but thousands of creatures crouch- 
ing down in a row." 

" As to the religious condition of this magnificent island 
of 15,000,000 people, he says there is * scarcely a temple of 
any kind to show that there is a thought of God in this 
country which He has so richly endowed.* And after describ- 
ing the wonderful ruins of the ancient temples at Mendoet, 
Boro-Bondor, and Tjandji-Seou, the Marquis contrasts with 
the past the spiritlessness of the present age in Java, when 
even 'art is completely dead.' He also affirms that the 
island was more populous 1,000 years ago than now. The 
same writer enters at great detail into the particulars of 
the Dutch exactions in Java, quoting from official figures and 
returns. These show that in the 33 years, from 1833 to 1866, 
the net profit of Java to Holland was ^72,000,000, or more than 
5^2,000,000 per annum throughout. This clear revenue is 
additional to the large amount required for meeting the colo- 
nial expenditure, and for the support of a Dutch army of 
30,000 men (of whom 11,000 are Europeans). Nor does it 
include the ' commissions' on all the Government crops 
enjoyed by the officials generally, both native and Dutch. 
The Marquis mentions also that the natives are compelled 
to sell two-thirds of their sugar crops to the Dutch Govern- 
ment at los. 3d. per picul (1321b.), which quantity sells in 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. gg 

Holland at six times the amount (6is, the picul). It is but 
fait to explain that this crop is aided by a loan from Govern- 
ment. But the cofifec crop must also be sold to the Dutch at 
one-third its marketable value." 

Since the foregoing was written the Dutch Government 
has passed a law providing that payments in money will in 
future be received instead of payments in sugar. This will 
be an advantage to the merchant, but, so far as is known, no 
change has been made in the condition of the native popula- 
tion. They are still ruled over by foreign masters for the 
exclusive gain of a foreign Government, the people of which 
make the high profession oi the Protestant reformed religion. 

Holland has produced some excellent men, noted for their 
philanthropy — a deep responsibility rests upon them as 
members of the Community. Can they be induced to look 
at the abject condition of their fellow-subjects in Java, and 
take measures to roll away the reproach at present brought 
upon' the Christian name ? 

The Dutch War in Acheen, 

But still more to be deplored was the agreement made by 
the British Government with the Dutch, in 1872, inasmuch 
as it led to two wars, one of which is still going on. 

When the Sultan of Acheen was first attacked by the Dutch, 

h a 



100 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

he appealed to his old friends, the English, and claimed pro- 
tection under his Treaty with England of 1819. 

The Treaty was not disputed by the British Government,^ 
but the Sultan was told in reply that he could not claim the 
protection that England was bound to afford to him, because 
England had subsequently " entered into a treaty with the 
Netherlands entirely inconsistent with it ;'* and, further, 
because England had not uninterruptedly observed the treaty. 

The war which has now been carried on by the Dutch 
Government against the Achinese in the north-western part 
of Sumatra is a war of aggression, into which it might 
almost be said the British Government had invited the 
Dutch to enter, for one of the clauses of the Convention 
between the English and Dutch which led to these wars runs 
thus : — ** Her Britannic Majesty desists from all objections against 
the extension of the Netherlands dominions in any part of the Island 
of Sumatra^ and consequently from the reserve in that respect 
contained in the Notes exchanged by theNetherland and British 
Plenipotentiaries at the conclusion of the Treaty of 1824." 

By the two wars — ^the consequence of a Convention 
negotiated in secret — ^the welfare of thousands and the 
honour of England have been compromised. It was to 
secret diplomacy that England was formerly committed to 
a compromise with slave-trading, by her old treaties with 
the Sultan of Zanzibar and the Imaum of Muscat. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. lOI 

So long as the English people are satisfied to allow their 
Ministers to make treaties of this kind in secret, they will 
be liable to all the discredit and injury such transactions 
involve. 

The Achinese have claims on Great Britain which have 
not been honourably met ; but, apart from this, and alto- 
gether apart from the merits of the case, it would be a 
kind and considerate act for the present Cabinet, in the 
interest of humanity, to use its influence with the Dutch 
Government in favour of the people of Acheen, who have 
now been engaged in defending their homes and their 
country for nearly two years against the cruel and barbarous 
aggressions of the Government of the Netherlands. 



102 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



CHAPTER XIII. 

Queensland — ^The Labour Traffic — Condition of the Islanders on the 

Estates. 

The early history of Queensland, so far as the natives 
are concerned, like the history of the other Australian 
Colonies, is written in blood. 

Experience has, in several instances, shown that the 
natives make good shepherds and herdsmen ; but the policy 
of those who have possessed themselves of extensive tracts 
of land has been to exterminate the original and rightful 
owners, and to import foreign labour. Hence a new species 
of slave-trade has sprung up. 

It was under the auspices of Sir G. Bowen that the 
introduction of South Sea Islanders, under labour contracts, 
into Queensland first took place. The illegality of the 
course was fully proved at the time, and the results brought 
deep discredit on the English name. 

To apply a remedy to the evils thus introduced, the 
Brisbane Parliament passed a Bill in 1868; but this Act^ 
as was anticipated by many able men, did not put an end 
to the evils — kidnapping and murder continue to be as rife 
as before. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. I03 

Public attention has been so much startled and absorbed 
with the atrocities committed in recruiting the Polynesian 
natives, that little attention has been paid to the question 
as to what is their actual state on the plantations in 
Queensland. 

Their condition has indeed been asserted to be everywhere 
good ; in proof of which, reference is made to the fact that 
some of the islanders who had returned to their homes have 
gone a second time to Queensland. 

This at first sight looks well ; but, to test its value as an 
indication of their general condition, numbers ought to be 
given. What is the proportion of those who go a second 
time compared with those who never do so? 

In a country where the estates are widely separated, and 
seldom visited by strangers, it is difficult to obtain inde- 
pendent and trustworthy information. 

A late Governor of Queensland, a few years ago, made 
a sort of royal progress among some of the estates, and 
reported that he found everything right and the islanders 
happy. Of course he did ! Could any other result have 
been anticipated? 

Another traveller,* paying an unexpected visit about the 



"Colonial Adventures and Experiences." By a University Man. 
London : Bell & Daldy. 1871. 



104 '^^^ LOST CONTINENT, 

same time, gave the following account of what he 
saw: — 

** The coolies being thus captured or procured, let us see 
how they are treated, or rather let me relate what I know 
of their treatment in two places where I have seen the 
system at work. . . . Their diet, as far as it came under 
my observation and notice, consisted chiefly of pumpkins, 
damaged corn, and such corn cobs as they could pick up 
or secrete, a pint-pot full of rice twice a-week (rice being 
a food untasted by them in their own country), and, when 
a bullock was killed, they got the head, entrails, and other 
refuse. ... I have compared them to slaves; they are 
worse off in many respects than if they were slaves. . • . 
After I had been on the plantation about a month, a cargo of 
coolies was brought into the port, and most of the (white) 
hands on the plantation received notice to leave in a week, 
some few being retained as overseers. . . . When the coolies 
were brought up to the plantation, I noticed that many 
of them had sores and deep cuts on their ankles ; and I 
found, on inquiry, that son;ie of them had been mutinous 
on the passage, and had been put in irons. Mutiny is a 
rather curious word to use in the case of a man who resists 
oppression, but it belongs to the new vocabulary. They 
were permitted to spend the first two days in building a 
hut for themselves. . . . There were in all about seventy. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. I05 

As soon as their household arrangements were completed, 
they were told off in gangs and set to work under white 
overseers, who were made responsible for getting a certain 
amount of work daily out of them. . . . Surely, if slavery 
was suppressed in the interests of the negro, this infamous 
traffic ought also to be suppressed in the interests of these 
islanders, who are people nearer akin to us by race than the 
negro." 

Near the towns where public influence is felt, the treat- 
ment of the islanders may be good; but the case is very 
different where their location is too remote to be either 
under the cognisance of the civil power or the influence of 
public opinion. Being under the bondage of contract, they 
are not free men, and therefore wholly unable to defend 
themselves against injustice and oppression. 

A temporary resident, in a district where many are em- 
ployed, writing about a year ago, remarked : — 

** Any person arriving on these plantations for the first 
time would be immediately shocked at the appearance of 
these Kanakas. ^I say that the Australian aborigines, in 
their primitive state, are less disgusting than these Kanakas. 
Did the Marquis of Normanby, when he visited two of these 
plantations, see the islanders as they usually go about the 
plantations, or were they compelled to put on their clothing 
on that momentous occasion ? But from what I learned I 



I06 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

do not think that His Excellency took the best means, if any 
at all, of becoming acquainted with the usual routine on these 
plantations to enable him to form an opinion, much less to 
eulogise the system. I beg leave to say that riding through the 
district, and partaking of the hospitalities of those favourable 
to the traffic, and who took good care to make everything look 
pleasant, would hardly afford him an opporttmity to judge. I 
doubt not that, were it known that any of the men could 
or^were likely to tell him how they came to the plan- 
tations, and were being treated, ample means would be 
taken to prevent their doing so. I therefore assert that 
His Excellency could know nothing of the system, except 
from what he was told by those interested in this nefarious 
traffic. 

*' I had the means of observing the manner these islanders 
are worked, and the treatment they receive on the plan- 
tations, and I have no hesitation in expressing my opinion 
that this traffic savours far too much of slavery, and 
should no longer be permitted to go on. I will just 
mention a few facts, which cannot be denied, for public 
information. 
/*'0n these plantations the islanders are turned into the^ 
cane-fields, or to such other place where they may be 
required, at seven o'clock in the morning, and kept at work 
until six p.m., one hour being allowed, from twelve to one. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. I07 

for dinner. Each gang has an overseer, to see that they 
are not skulking work. Those engaged in the boiling-house 
are frequently at work until twelve o*clock at night, but 
generally up to ten o'clock p.m. I had a conversation with 
a sugar-boiler one day, about the admirable way in which 
these people went about their labour, and he informed me 
that, if they did not do so, he would soon make them. I 
asked him, 'How would you?' * Why,' he replied, * by 
giving them a few good cracks with a sugar-cane.' I believe 
this is by no means an unusual circumstance. These people 
are made, or rather compelled, to work when they may by 
sickness be unable to do so. The sole or the whole idea 
of the planters seems to be, to obtain as much labour as 
can possibly be got from these people during the term of 
engagement. Even on Sundays these men are compelled 
to work, by loading the punts with sugar and conveying 
the same to the place of shipping. 

" They are supposed to be impervious to sickness. If 
they complain of illness they are not believed, but it is 
thought to be idleness and an indisposition to labour. I 
shall mention a circumstance which was told me by one oi 
themselves, who could speak English sufficiently well to be 
understood. It is this : — A man from the Island of Tanna, 
whilst working on one of these plantations, became * very 
bad,' and was confined to his bed. The manager, not 



I08 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

seeing him about as usual, inquired ; being informed of the 
poor wretch being ill, he went into the hut where he was 
lying, and, with a good-sized sugar-cane, actually thrashed 
the unfortunate man from the bed to the milL Yet none of 
the many Kanakas who were present, and saw the ill-treat- 
ment their countryman received, made the slightest show 
of resentment. I saw one of these Polynesians with a bad 
wound on his thigh, which, upon inquiry, I found had been 
inflicted by a severe kick from the manager, with his heavy 
nailed boot, for some alleged skulking. 

" Some may ask. Why have no complaints been made by 
these Kanakas as to their ill-treatment if they have any 
cause of complaint? To this I reply, that they have no 
means afforded them to complain. Is not almost every one 
of their masters a magistrate ? Is not the police magistrate 
of the district the frequent and welcome guest of their 
master ? If one of these men was to endeavour to find his 
way to the nearest Police Bench to complain, he would be 
immediately pursued, and brought up under the Masters' 
and Servants' Act. How are the majority of these people 
to obtain redress for any injury they may receive when they 
cannot make themselves understood, and no interpreters 
are provided by the Government which brings them to the 
colony ? 

** The reason the public do not hear of the many abuses 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. I09 

which take place on the plantations of the Polynesian 
labourers is easily answered by the fact of there being no 
local and independent press to make these abuses known. 
There is only one newspaper, about eighty or one hundred 
miles from the plantations, but it dares not assume an 
independent position towards this traffic." 

From such a state of things free labour and fair wages 
would have preserved the fine Colony of Queensland. 



no THE LOST CONTINENT. 



CHAPTER XIV, 

Coolies imported into the British West Indies daring a period of Twenty- 
nine years — The number returned to their own country — Their 
savings — Number now in the Colonies — The dealh-rate. 

The returns laid before the House of Commons of the immigrants 
and liberated Africans admitted into the West India Colonies between 
1843 ^^^ 1^72 show a total taken into British Guiana, Trinidad, 
Jamaica, St. Vincent, and Grenada, amounting to 161,539. Of this 
number 46,038 are dead : a fearful rate of mortality in countries where 
the native population increases rapidly. 

The number who have returned to their own country is stated as 
16,938; the average annual savings of each has been £1 2s. 6d. For 
this pitiful amount these people have worked hard for some of the best 
years of their lives. No wonder then that, in order to procure a 
supply of labour, the contract, the recruiter, or the kidnapper, are still 
a necessity. 

This forced labour system is costly in money and wasteful of life. 
It is an attempt to obtain labour that is cheap. But low-priced labour 
is not necessarily cheap ; especially is this true if all the costs of the 
recruiting system are taken into account. 

The adoption of free labour fairly paid for would probably be 
quickly followed by a free and abundant immigration into the islands. 

The Friend of India, after a careful review of the whole working of 
the affair, has fitly termed it " the twin-sister of the slave-trade." The 
arguments adduced for both are in many respects identical. It was 
maintained that, though the system might be one of forced labour for 
a time, the coolie was to be benefited and enriched. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE- III 

The returns, extending over a period of twenty years, show how far 
this has been realised. But it was also confidently anticipated that our 
colonies would be peopled by it. The returns, however, show that, 
whilst the West India Islands have not been colonised, the countries 
from which the coolies have been drawn are being depopulated. In 
fact, the rate of mortality has been such as would depopulate the world 
at no very distant day. 



RETURNS OF IMMIGRANTS LAID BEFORE 
PARLIAMENT, 

**The Colonial Office, oti the motion of Mr. Crum-Ewing, has laid 
upon the table of the House of Commons a return of the number of 
immigrants and liberated Africans admitted into British West Indian 
Colonies from 1843 to 1872 inclusive, and also the number who have 
returned to their own country, with the amount of their savings. 

It appears that twelve colonies have imported immigrants. The 
chief sources of supply have been from India, whence have come 
146,663 persons; Madeira, 34,364; Sierra Leone, 21,118; China, 
16,222. Of the 31,336 individuals who have migrated from one 
■colony to another, British Guiana alone has received 23,649. The 
entire number of hands imported from the sixteen specified localities is 
263,833, giving an average of 9,097 per annum. 

Whatever may be the object in obtaining these returns, they suggest 
matters for grave consideration, and show that immigration has not 
been so remunerative to the labourers as they were led to expect, and 
that it has so far failed in colonising the dependencies of the British 
Crown. 

.When in India the coolies were promised, in addition to money 
wages, house and land rent free; gratuitous medical and hospital 
attendance ; ;f 10 bounty on their return to their country, and other 
-special advantages. Recruiters failed not to give the most glowing 
-accounts of the places, where they were assured of happy days, light 
work, and large monetary results. That a few of the 146,663 coolies 



112 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



from India, favoured by exceptional circumstances, have done well, is 
cheerfully acknowledged; but looking at the results, not from a planter's 
point of view, who regards alone his crops and profits, but from the 
labourer's point of view, who looks at the wages saved and benefits 
obtained after a ten years' contract and industrial residence, we cannot 
pronounce them satisfactory. 

Some planters in Jamaica have lately requested the Governor, Sir 
John Peter Grant, to induce labourers from Malta to migrate to 
Jamaica. These people, however, are indisposed to go unless they can 
save at least threepence a day, or about £$ 1 8s. per year — a sum far 
beyond what the coolies from India, in that colony, have saved. 

The immigration agents have, no doubt, given as favourable a report 
of amounts earned as circumstances permitted. They have not only 
credited those who have returned to their country with cash, but also 
with the value of jewellery possessed. It should, however, be borne in 
mind that in very many instances a portion of the cash and jewellery 
belonged to deceased friends and relatives, the number of whom is very 
large. In not a few cases, also, the sums taken include moneys sent by 
coolies yet under contract to their friends and relatives in India. Hence 
considerable deductions have to be made from the amounts given as 
savings and property of those who return. 

But, taking n<yne of these circumstances into account, what is the 
amount — having had house, land, medical attendance free, and bounty 
money — of the savings of those who have returned to India ? In 
Trinidad the average is £2 3s. per annum; in British Guiana, ^i 19s.; 
Grenada, j^^i 6s.; St. Vincent, £1 ; Jamaica, 15s.; St. Lucia, 14s. 6d. 
When we know that many of these people have worked hard and 
industriously, that some of them have invested their little savings in, 
say, a cow or other animal, to add to their resources, and have been 
successful in this auxiliary resource, we can understand that on their 
return to India, their report will not be encouraging, and that it is 
difficult to get hands to go in search of fortunes in the West India 
Colonies. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. 



113 



But there is another view of the present system. From the return 
we see that, while comparatively few return to their own country, 
colonisation is not secured. Human life is wasted, and, unless kept up by 
constant supply from abroad, the imported coolies will die put, and the 
colony left as before. Take the returns of the following islands : — 





Number 


Number 
returned to 


Number 


Number 




of coolies 


their own 


yet in 


unaccounted 




imported. 


country. 


the colony. 


for. 


British Guiana .. 


. 93.230 


8,982 


5S.H8 


28,965 


Trinidad 


. 47,342 


4.54* 


28,425 


11,910 


Jamaica 


. 16,471 


3.194 


9,000 


4,267 


St. Vincent 


1,926 


34 


1,485 


407 


Grenada 


. 2,570 


186 


1,89s 


489 



161,539 16,938 96,053 46,038 

While, during the twenty-nine years covered by these returns, only one 
in nine has returned to his country, nearly one in four is unaccounted 
for, or, in other words, is dead. The birth- should, under a healthy 
state of things, have exceeded the death-rate, as is the case among the 
Creole population. Here, however, instead of there being, during the 
twenty-nine years, a large, or any, increase in the Indian population, 
there is actually a decrease of nearly twenty-five per cent, of the 
imported coolies." — Anti-Slavery Reporter. 

The plea frequently put forth that the Coolies are benefited 
by the system derives no support from these official returns — 
a careful examination of them plainly shows that, in the face 
of such a death-rate, the system cannot be maintained either 
on economical or moral grounds. 



114 THE LOST CONTINENT, 



CHAPTER XV. 

Concluding Remarks. 

In referring to slavery in the Eastern Nations, allusion is 
sometimes made to the religious difficulty. This some people 
believe to be a great obstacle in the way of the extinction of 
clavery in the Mussulman Countries. Speak to an ordi- 
nary Englishman on the subject, he will look grave and talk 
about the Koran : an intelligent Mohammedan, however, 
will frankly tell you slavery is an evil institution which must 
be abolished. 

This is not surprising in view of the fact that the Koran 
strongly commends the virtue of giving liberty to slaves."* 

Although this supposed religious difficulty as an obstacle 
to abolition is unreal, it is a fact that Islamism has done 
much to extend slavery ; but it should be remembered with 
humiliation that the professors of Christianity have done 
much in the same evil direction, and that they are not even 
now clear of reproach. 

The Sultan of Turkey, the Khedive, and several of the 
principal expounders of the Mohammedan religion, have at 
various times unequivocally condemned slavery. A number 

* See Appendix E. 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. II5 

of the latter class have solemnly declared that " selling male 
and female slaves is an abomination to the most noble faith/' 
and that they have the authority of Mahomet himself for 
stating **that the worst of men is the seller of men." 

In reference to the Declaration of the European Powers at 
Vienna and Verona, it has been suggested that, as the nations 
of Europe have all abandoned the slave-trade, the purpose 
has been accomplished — but the Declarations went much 
further than this ; the respective Powers pledged themselves 
to unite in measures for the complete, definitive, and universal 
abolition of the slave-trade in Africa. 

On looking back to the time when these declarations were 
made, and to what passed during a period of some twenty 
years after, especially in reference to the treaties made with 
the Mohammedan Powers, it is impossible not to see that 
much more was done formerly than has been attempted of 
later years. 

It is true that a new treaty has been made by England 
with Zanzibar, but it required an agitation of many years to 
induce the British Government even to do that, and it was 
current in the House of Commons that the Government of 
the day granted the Committee of Inquiry, which resulted 
in the negociation of that Treaty, from some apprehension that 
the safety of the Administration was involved* 

Although the treaties with the Eastern Powers never were 

I 2 



Il6 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

faithfully observed by Turkey, Egypt, and Persia, there is reason 
to believe that much more attention was paid to them for- 
merly than has been latterly the case. Those nations have 
read in the lines of our conduct of late that they are not so 
much expected to abstain from slave-trading, as from doing 
it openly. It is said, by those who ought to know, tha 
not many years since an English Consul in Egypt was 
removed from his office by the British Government simply 
because he was too much disposed to see the provisions 
of British treaty and native law carried honestly into effect. 
But it is not alone in Turkey and Egypt that an interest 
in this cause has given way to apathy and indifference. 
Thirty years ago. Colonel Sheil faithfully represented the 
views of England at the Court of Persia, and was preparing 
the way both for the abolition of slavery and the slave-trade 
in that country. But since his departure from Teheran, so 
far as is known, our representatives in that country have 
attempted nothing. 

Nobody desires to see the British Government enter upon 
a hostile or quarrelsome course ; but as treaties are already 
in existence, and the enormous interests of a Continent are 
involved, can our present feeble, faltering, and questionable 
course on this subject in the East, be contemplated without 
a sense of humiliation and regret ? 

To what cause must be attributed this comparative indif- 



SLAVERY AND THE SLAVE-TRADE. II7 



ference of English Statesmen in modern times ? There is 
no want on their part of professed interest in the subject, but, 
with one or two noble exceptions, our Statesmen seldom see 
that the right time to take any action is come. 

But it would not be just to lay all the blame at the doors 
of Governments. The people at large have been greatly at 
fault for want of information. Until within the last three 
years a common notion has prevailed that the slave-trade 
was a thing of the past. A great change in this respect has, 
however, now taken place and a knowledge of the real state 
of Africa has largely increased. 

When the people of this and the other great nations are 
properly alive to the subject, Statesmen will find that there is 
such a thing as a right time to act. Germany and Russia 
stand ready to unite their influence with that of England. 
France will probably not be behind. As to America her 
national policy is now Anti-slavery. Her interest in the 
Eastern Nations is not small — her missions in those countries 
are numerous and singularly successful. 

The whole world needs Africa, it needs the produce of her 
vast and fertile lands. Her teeming millions, relieved from 
the slave-trade, and the wild and hopeless desolation which 
it spreads, will find their interest in cultivating the soiL 

Africa needs clothing and manufactured goods. Europe 
needs the raw material and produce of Africa, each Continent 



Il8 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

might and ought to be a blessing to the other. Even the 
great famines in India might be prevented by the cultivation 
of Eastern Africa. 

The evident designs of a beneficent Providence are frus- 
trated by the present state of things. 

But it is on still higher considerations that the state of 
Africa appeals at this moment to England and the civilized 
world. No man can comprehend the extent of the evil, or 
measure the amount of human suffering which slavery and 
all its consequences at this moment involve. 

Everything which has passed of late, and much that is still 
passing indicate that the time is come for the abolition of 
this, the greatest evil that ever affiicted mankind. 

The great work was half done long ago — many circum- 
stances combine to show that with the blessing of the 
Almighty it may be completed now. 

The time is surely come when this great barrier to the 
entrance and progress of Christianity may be thrown down 
to rise no more again for ever. 

So will the way be prepared for Africa to have her part in 
the fulfilment of the words of ancient prophecy — " Violence 
shall no more be heard in thy land, wasting or destruction 
within thy borders, but thou shalt call thy walls salvation 
and thy gates praise." 



APPENDIX A. 



DECLARATION des 8 Cours, relative a Pabolition universelle de la 
Traite des Negres. 

(Congres de Vienna, protocole du 8 Fevrier, 1815.) 

Les Plenipotentiaires des Puissances qui ont signe le Traite de Pars 
du 30 Mai, 1 8 14, reunis en Conference, — ayant pris en consideration : 

Que, le Commerce connu sous le nom de Traite des Negres c^Afrique 
a ete envisage, par les hommes justes et eclaires de tous les terns, comme 
repugnant aux principes d'humanite et de la morale universelle ; 

Que, les circonstances particulieres auxquelles ce Commerce a du 
sa naissance et la difficulte d'en enterrompre brusquement le cours ont pu 
couvrir, jusqu'a un certain point, ce qu'il y avoit d'odieux dans sa con- 
servation, mais qu'enfin la voix publique s'est elevee dans tous les pays 
civilises pour demander qu'il soit supprime le plutot possible ; 

Que, depuis que le caractere et les details de ce Commerce ont ete 
mieux connus et les maux de toute espece qui I'accompagnent complete- 
ment devoiles, plusieurs des Gouvernemens Europeens ont pris en effet 
la resolution dele faire cesser, et que successivement toutesles Puissances, 
poss^dant des Colonies dans les differentes parties du monde, ont 
reconnu, soit par des Actes Legislatifs, soit par des Traites et autres 
Engagemens formels, Tobligation et la n^cessite de Fabolir ; 

Que, par un Article Separo du dernier Trait6 de Paris, la Grande 
Bretagne et la France se sont engigees a reunir leurs efforts au Congres 
de Vienne pour faire prononcer, par toutes les Puissances de la 
Chretient^, Tabolition universelle et definitive de la Traite des Negres ; 



120 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

Que, les Plenipotentiaires rassembles dans ce Congres nc sauroient 
mieux honorer leur Mission, remplir leur devoir et manifester les 
principes qui guidcnt leurs Augustes Souverains, qu'en Iravaillant a. 
r^aliser cet engagement et en proclamant, au nom de leurs Souverains,. 
le vau de mettre un terme a un fleau qui a si long terns desole TAfrique, 
degrade TEurope, et afflige Thumanite ; 

— Les dits Plenipotentiaires sont convenus d'ouvrir leurs deliberations 
sur les moyens d'accomplir un objet aussi salutaire, par une Declaration 
solemnelle des principes qui les ont dirige dans ce travail. 

En consequence, et duement autorises a cet Acte par Tadhesion 
unanime de leurs Cours respectives au principe enonce dans le dit 
Article Separe du Traite de Paris, ils declarent, a la face de TEuropc, 
que, regardant I'abolition universelle de la Traite des Negres comme une 
mesure particulierement digne de leur attention, conforme a Tesprit du 
sieclc et aux principes genereux de leurs Augustes Souverains, ils sont 
animes du desir sincere de concourir a Texecution la plus promptc et la 
plus efficace de cette mesure, par tous les moyens a leur disposition et 
d'agir, dans Temploi de ces moyens avec, tout le zele et toute la 
perseverance qu'ils doivent a une aussi grande et belle cause. 

Trop instruits toutefois des sentimens de leurs Souverains, pour ne 
pas pre voir que, quelqu*honorable que soit leur but, ils ne le pour- 
suivront pas sans de justes menagemens pour les interets, les habitudes 
et les preventions memes de leurs Sujets ; les dits Plenipotentiaires 
reconnoissent, en meme tems, que cette Declaration generale ne sauroit 
prejuger le terme que chaque Puissance en particulier pourroit envisager 
comme le plus convenable pour Tabolition definitive du Commerce des 
Negres : — Par consequent, la determination de Tepoque ou ce Commerce 
doit universellement cesser sera un objet de negociation entre les 
Puissances; bien entendu que Ton ne n^ligera aucun moycn propre a 
en assurer et a en accel^rer la marche ; et que I'engagement reciproque, 
contracte. par la presente Declaration- entre les Souverains qui y ont 
pris part, ne sera consider^ comme rempli qu'au moment ou un succ^s 
complet aura couronne leurs efforts reunis. 



APPENDIX. 121- 



En portant cette Declaration a la connoissance. de TEurope, et Jc 
toutcs les Nations civilis&s de la terre, Ics dits Plenipotentiaires se 
ilattent d'engager tous les autres Gouvernemens, et notamment ccuy 
qui, en abolissant la Traite des Negrcs ont manifest^ d^ja les memes 
sentimens, a les appuyer de leur suffrage dans une Cause dont le triomphe 
final sera un des plus beaux monumens du siecle qui Ta embrassee et qui 
Taura glorieu semen t terminde. 

ViENNE, le 8 Fevricr 1S15. 

Castlereagh Palmella 

Steward, Lieut.- Gen. Saldanha 

Wellington Lobo 

Nesselrode Humboldt 

C. Lowenhielm. Metternich 

Gomez Labrador Talleyrand 



RESOLUTIONS relatives a F Abolition de la Traite des Negres, adoptees 
a la Conference de Ferone, le z% Novembre 1822. 

Les Plenipotentiaires de I'Autriche, de la France, de la Grande 
Bretagne, de la Prusse et de la Russie, reunis en Congres, a Verone, 

Considerant, — Que Leurs Augustes Souverains ont pris part a la 
Declaration du 8 Fevrier 1 8 1 5, par laquelle, les Puissances reunies en 
Congres a Vienne, ont proclame, a la face de TEurope, leur Resolution 
invariable de faire cesser le Commerce connu sous le nom de la Traite 
des Negres d'Afrique ; 

Considerant de plus, — Que, malgre cette Declaration et en depit des 
Mesures Legislatives dont elle a ete suivie dans plusieurs Pays et des 
differens Traites conclus depuis la dite epoque entre les Puissances 
Maratimes, ce Commerce, solemnellement proscrit, a continue jusqu'a 
Gc jour, qu'il a gagn^ en intensite cc qu'il peut avoir perdu en etendue, 
qu'il a pris meme un caractere plus odieux et plus funeste par la nature 
des moyens auxquels ceux qui I'exerccnt sont forces d'avoir recours ; 



122 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



Que les causes d'un abus aussi r^voltant se trouvent principalment 
dans les pratiques frauduleuses, moycnnant lesquelles les entrepreneurs 
de ces speculations condamnables ^ludent les lois de leurs pays, dejouent 
la surveillance des batimens employes pour arreter le cours de leurs 
iniquites, et couvrent les operations criminelles dont les milliers d'etres 
humains deviennent d'ann^ en ann^e les innocentes victimes ; 

Que les Puissances de TEurope sont appel^es par leurs engagemens 
anterieurs, autant que par un devoir sacre, a chercher les moyens les 
plus efficaces pour prevenir un trafic, que d^ja les Lois de la presque 
totalite des Pays Civilises ont declare illicite et coupable, et pour punir 
rigoureusement ceux qui le poursuivent, en contravention manifeste de 
ces Lois ; 

— Ont reconnu la neeessite de vouer Tattention la plus serieuse a un 
objet d'une aussi grande importance pour le bien et V hondeur ne 
I'humanite, — et declarent, en consequence, — au nom de Leurs Augustes 
Souverains : 

Qu'ils persistent invariablement dans les principes et les sentimens 
que ces Souverains ont manifeste par la Declaration du 8 Fevrier 1 8 1 5 ; 

Qu'ils n'ont pas cesse, et ne cesseront jamais de regarder le Commerce 
des Negres comme ; "un fleau, qui a trop longtems desole I'Afrique, 
degrade TEurope, et afflig^ Thumanitd ** ; 

Qu'ils sont prets a concourir a tout ce qui pourra assurer et accelerer 
rAbolition complete et definitive de ce Commerce ; 

Qu'afin de donner efFet a cette Declaration renouvelee, leurs Cabinets 
respectifs se livreront avec empressement a Texamen de toute Mesure 
xrompatible avec leurs droits et les int^rets de leurs Sujets, pour amener 
un resultat constatant, aux yeux du Monde, la sincerity de leurs voeux 
-ct de leurs efForts en faveur d'une cause digne de leur soUicitude 
-commune. 



APPENDIX. 123 



APPENDIX B. 



SIR SAMUEL BAKER'S EXPEDITION. 

(To the Editor of 7he Times.) 

Sir, — I have seen in The Times of the 27th inst. a letter from Sir 
Samuel Baker, in which he says to those who are really interested in 
the slave-trade and its attendant horrors, there are important facts he 
can and will prove by numerous witnesses now in England. 

He charges Abou Sooad with stealing 1,400 head of cattle from the 
natives of the Shir tribe, and bringing them to Gondokoro ; also that 
he overtook three boats on the way to Khartoum, laden with 700 slaves 
belonging to Abou Sooad. Now, as I am one of the unfortunate 
survivors of his expedition, I presume I am one of the parties he refers 
to, and hasten to give my testimony in the matter. 

Previous to Sir Samuel Baker's leaving Khartoum for Gondokoro he 
made arrangements with the firm of which Abou Sooad was agent for 
a supply of cattle, at so much per head, during his stay in the country. 
In agreement with this arrangement, Abou Sooad brought up a number 
of cattle to Gondokoro, which he took from the Shir tribe in the usual 
manner. These cattle Sir Samuel Baker took by force from Abou Sooad 
without paying for them. Sir Samuel must have been quite aware that 
Abou Sooad could only obtain them in the manner he did when he 
made the agreement with his firm in Khartoum. I am not aware that 
Sir S. Baker ever made any recompense to the Shir tribe for the loss of 
their cattle, although quite within his power to do so. 

It is quite true that we overtook three boats with a number of slaves 
on board, and I have no doubt that the boats belonged to Abou Sooad's 



124 THE LOST CONTINENT. 

firm. It was very fortunate for us we came up with the slave-dealers, 
as without their assistance we could not have got through the Sud in 
the Bahir Giraffe until the river rose. Delay in that dreadful region 
would have been attended with great disaster in the state of health we 
were all in. The slave-dealers gave their assistance with a hearty good- 
will ; and Sir Samuel rewarded the head man of the slave-fleet with 
suitable presents, and parted with mutual good wishes. 

If Sir Samuel Baker wishes at any time for my testimony as to the 
barbarous manner in which the expedition was conducted, the whole- 
sale murders, pillage, and ruin of the country, he is welcome to it ; or 
should the Royal Geographical Society or any body of gentlemen wish for 
any information respecting that futile expedition, I shall be glad to give 
it previous to my departure from this country. Sir Samuel Baker states 
that he gave Colonel Gordon assistance and advice as to the construction 
of his iron carts and other means of transport. He may have done so ; 
but Colonel Gordon never acted upon it, they having been designed and 
ordered by me at Colonel Gordon's request, I having been in his employ 
for some weeks previous to his departure for Egypt. 

J. M 'William, 
Chief Engineer late White Nile Expedition. 

8, Balmoral Terrace, Aberdeen, July 28, 



APPENDIX. 125 



APPENDIX C 



THE LATE BISHOP PATTESON ON THE LABOUR 

TRAFFIC. 

Great stress is sometimes laid upon the fact that, though Bishop 
Patteson condemned the traffic as carried on his time, he did not 
advocate its total suppression. But it should be remembered that, 
whilst many outrages had been committed when the Bishop gave this 
opinion, the evils of the system were then only partially developed. 
Had he lived to witness the horrible atrocities that have since been 
perpetrated, and the total depopulation of some of the islands, or had 
he been better acquainted with the condition of large numbers of the 
victims under contract labour in Queensland and Fiji, the places of 
their destination, it can scarcely be imagined that so enlightened and 
excellent a man would have uttered a word in favour of it. To quote 
the Bishop, therefore, in support of the present system, appears scarcely 
just to his memory. 



126 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



APPENDIX D. 



EXTRACTS OF A PAPER ON THE NORTH-WEST 
AFRICAN EXPEDITION. 

" The object of the North-west African Expedition is to establish a. 
commercial and missionary station at the mouth of the River Belta, on 
the Atlantic, in the neighbourhood of Cape Juby and Cape Bojador, 
on the North-west Coast of Africa, opposite the Canary Islands ; ta 
make a preliminary survey of the route between Cape Bojador, on 
the Atlantic Coast, and the Northern bend of the River Niger at 
Timbuctoo, in the interior, for the purpose of cutting a canal for 
commercial intercourse with Central Africa. 

" The great importance of a commercial highway into Interior 
Africa is patent to every mind; the revenue that would arise from 
such an enterprise would be immense, and the blessings to the natives 
would be equally great, shut up as they are at present from European 
intercourse. Such a highway would open up and develop the vast 
resources of that great continent to the civilised and commercial world.. 
According to the authority of celebrated African travellers, the pro- 
jected canal is void of any formidable obstacle, and the physical 
formation of the great desert (Sahara) at this part favours the scheme, 
as the distance between the mouth of the River Belta and the Northern 
bend of the Niger at Timbuctoo is only about 740 miles, 630 of which 
is occupied by a great hollow called ' El Tiris and El Juf,* the existence 
of which is proved by Dr. Barth, Bou. el Moghdad Panet, &c., 
bordered by considerable hills, and is supposed to be about 140 feet 



APPENDIX. 127 



below the level of the Atlantic, and has probably been at one time 
covered by the sea. This deeply-depressed country is separated from 
the sea by a broken ridge of about thirty miles, through which runs 
the River Belta, about twenty-five miles, so that all that is required 
is to deepen the channel and cut through the ridge, and let the 
Atlantic fall into this vast arid basin, which would form a fine sheet of 
water and improve the climate, as that of the Suez Desert has done, 
and would also become more fertile for pasturage and agriculture, and 
carry commerce at once into the heart of Africa. 

"A junction with the Niger is of the highest commercial importance ; 
it would not only command the whole trade of the populous cities and 
towns on the banks of the Niger, and the countries around teeming 
with population, but would command the trade of the great tributary 
rivers of the Niger as far as Lake Tchad, thus opening a direct com- 
mercial intercourse with about 20,000,000 inhabitants who have 
hitherto been almost excluded from trade, and would, moreover, 
become the conmiercial medium between North Central Africa and the 
populous regions of Tafilelt and. Twat. 

" This country produces grain, cotton, ebony, indigo, iron, ivory, 
gold, &c.; the desert produces ostrich feathers, gum, palm oil, dates, &c.; 
coffee and rice could be cultivated to any extent. 

"The amount which may be required for an able and complete 
survey from Cape Juby, on the Atlantic Coast, to Timbuctoo, in the 
interior of Africa, will probably be about jf 5,000 ; towards which sub- 
scriptions are earnestly solicited from those who are interested either in 
the extension of our commerce, or the civilisation and well-being of the 
African people, 

" Donations will be thankfully received, on behalf of the Trustees, by 

"Donald Mackenzie. 
"125, Sandringham Road, Dalston'^ 



128 THE LOST CONTINENT. 



" Arm;) and Navy Club, St, James's, 

" ZOtb January, 1875. 
" Dear Sir, — I have read your communication with intense interest ; 
the subject is one that has engaged my attention for many years. You 
propose to work in the neighbourhood of Cape Juby; my idea was, that 
Cape Blanco would offer better facilities for the engineer. I am glad 
that a survey is to be undertaken to ascertain the practicability of sub- 
merging the Sahara from the Atlantic at some point which shall be 
beyond the jurisdiction of the Emperor of Morocco on the one hand, 
and northward of the French on the other. I shall be glad to aid you 
in a scheme second only to the Suez Canal. It is the^^nly way to bring 
Christianity, commerce, and civilisation to the teeming millions at it 

centre. 

" Yours faithfully, 

" John H. Glover, 

'' Commander R.N. 
*' To Donald Mackenzie." 



" An advantageous spot might be fixed upon the North-western Coast 
of Africa, in an independent district near the Empire of Morocco, 
where goods would have only to pass one tribe, and subject to no import 
-whatever, neither would they be subject to any duty on entering the 
city of Timbuctoo, as they would enter at the Bob Sahara, or the gate 
of the desert, which exempts them from duty or import. Some persons 
have declared that the inhabitants of the Sahara are a wild and savage 
race, untractable and not to be civilised by commerce or any other 
means, this T beg leave to contradict. I speak not from the experience 
of books, but from an actual intercourse, from having passed many years 
of my youth among them. 

"Vasco de Gama." 



APPENDIX. t29 



APPENDIX E. 



THE KORAN ON SLAVERY. 

'* Si quelques-uns de vos esclaves en qui vous avez reconnu des bonnes 
qualit^s, vous demandent leur affranchissement par ecrit donnez-le leur, 
et faites leur meme part de ces bien que Dieu vous a dispenses." — 
Sour ate La Lumiere^ xx. 33. 

" Pour tous les vrais Musulmans, Bon-Hourira a prononce cette 
} sentence : * Ne dites pas, mon esclave, car nous sommes tous les 

esclaves d'Allah, mais dires, mon serviteur ou ma servante.' " 

" Le Commentateur Musulman Achab a dit — * L'enfant d'une esclave, 
frapp^ douloureusement par son ma'itre, pent le fuir.'" 

f 

" D'apres les tradites, * Celui qui met en liberte un esclave est exempt 

\ des feux de Penferr — V Esc lav age cbez les Musulmans. M, Dunant, 

Geneve. 



That the Mohammedan religion sanctions slavery is not to be 
questioned, but it does not therefore follow that it offers any serious 
obstacle to its abolition. 

A religion which declares the manumission of slaves to be an act 
of the highest conceivable merit in this world, and one that even gives 



130 . THE LOST CONTINENT. 

a title to happiness in the next, cannot be considered a stronghold of 
slavery. 

If it be true that Africa cannot be delivered from the slave-trade 
while slavery exists in the Eastern countries, it is not less true that the 
Mohammedan nations cannot be roused from their present state of 
lethargy and sensuality while slavery, in the form peculiar to the 
Moslems, continues to exist. No people have suffered more from 
the effects of slavery than the Mussulmans. They occupy some of 
the finest portions of the Earth, but under their rule those countries 
are in many parts little better than uncultivated wastes. All history 
shows that where slavery prevails every other evil follows in its train. 
That it should be so appears to be the retributive law of Providence, 
from which there is no escape. 

The abolition of slavery in Turkey and her dependencies is at the 
present moment an absolute and pressing necessity, if she is to continue 
to maintain an independent existence. 



London : Bakrktt, Sows & Co., Crown Printing Works, Seething Lane, E.C. 



LA TRAITE ORIENTALE. 

Histoire des chasses a rhomme organis6es en Afrique depuis 
quinze ans pour les Marches de TOrient. Par Etienne- 
Felix Berlioux, Professor d* Histoire, au Lyc^e Imperiale 
de Lyon. 

GuiLLAUMiN, Paris, 1870. 



ANDRE BRUE. 

Ou i'Origine de la Colonie Fran^aise du Senegal. Par 
Etienne-Felix Berlioux. 

GuiLLAUMiN, Paris, 1874. 



DOCTRINA PTOLEM^L 

Ab injuria recentiorum Vindicata sive Nilus superior et 
' Niger verus, scripsit Stephanus-Felix Berlioux. 

^ GuiLLAUMiN, Paris. 



THE SLAVE-TRADE IN 
AFRICA IN 1872. 

^ Principally carried on for the supply of Turkey, Egypt, 
Persia and Zanzibar. By Etienne-Felix Berlioux. From 
^ the French, with a Preface by Joseph Cooper. 
London : 27, New Broad Street. 



5V» 



MAY 2 8 1930 




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